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Democracy
For All: Restoring Immigrant Voting Rights in the United States
“Democracy for All is the most thoroughgoing exploration
we have of non-citizen voting in the United States, past and present.
The issues raised by Hayduk’s book — particularly at
a time of high rates of immigration — ought to inform public
debate in communities across the nation.”
—Alexander Keyssar, Professor of History and Social Policy,
Harvard University, and author of The Right to Vote
“This is an immensely valuable and promising book tackled
in a serious and thorough way. It has a chance to speak to a broad
national audience in a clear and accessible manner.”
—Jamin Raskin, author of Overruling Democracy
“This passionately argued and thoroughly documented work
is the best single study of whether to grant electoral rights to
immigrant non-citizens. Hayduk carefully, clearly, and compellingly
dissects the past, present, and future of one of our era’s
most important civil rights challenges.”
—John Mollenkopf, Distinguished Professor of Political Science,
City University Graduate Center
“Millions of long-term non-citizen residents abide in the
United States without any formal representation in its democratic
political system. Hayduk provides a thorough, and much-needed brief
outlining the history, contemporary status, and arguments for (and
against) non-citizen voting in the U.S. An excellent source for
an important question in American politics today.”
—Michael Jones-Correa, Department of Government, Cornell University
Voting is for citizens only, right? Not exactly. It is not widely
known that immigrants, or noncitizens, currently vote in local
elections in over a half dozen cities and towns in the U.S.; nor
that campaigns to expand the franchise to noncitizens have been
launched in at least a dozen other jurisdictions from coast to
coast over the past decade. These practices have their roots in
another little-known fact: for most of the country’s history
— from the founding until the 1920s — noncitizens
voted in forty states and federal territories in local, state,
and even federal elections, and also held public offi ce such
as alderman, coroner, and school board member. Globally, over
forty countries
on nearly every continent permit voting by noncitizens. Legal
immigrants, or resident aliens, pay taxes, own businesses and
homes, send their children to public schools, and can be drafted
or serve in the military, yet proposals to grant them voting rights
are often met with great resistance. But, in a country where “no
taxation without representation” was once a rallying cry
for revolution, such a proposition may not, after all, be so outlandish.
Democracy for All examines the politics and practices of noncitizen
voting in the United States, chronicling the rise and fall —
and re-emergence — of immigrant voting in the U.S. In addition
to making the case for noncitizen voting, this book
takes a close look at the politics of and actors in recent campaigns
that successfully reestablished noncitizen voting, others that
failed, and ones that are currently underway. Democracy for All
explores the prospects for a truly universal suffrage in America.
Routledge,
2006.
Amazon.com
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