Adesida, Dotun
Baraka, Ahmed
Binx, Eugene
Biswas, Rakesh
Brown, Dr. Glen
Chambers, Eric
Chambers, Lesley
Chappel, T. A.
Culling, Peter
Falit, Joseph E.
Fawcett, Shaun
Fitzgerald-Clarke, Michael
Fleming, Suzanne
Gheorghiu, Cristache
Huchu, Tendai
Jacobsen, Heidi
Knapp, Artie
Kumar, G. Ram
Lay, Vicheka
Litt, Dr. Jerome Z.
Miller, Harley
Maffey, Laura
Maffey, Riccardo
Milazzo, Ronald
Minya, Dzimba
Neo
Okonkwo, Ikechukwu
Patterson, R.J.
Rinaldi, Jacquie
Roberts, Ella
Sharp, Ian
Sooriyarachchi, Janaki
Spudich, Giulietta
Taylor, Roy
Thompson, Tantse
Turley, Keith
Watson, Rob
Williams, Keith
Yarbrough, Alan

1119



Joseph E. Falit

Joseph E. Falit grew up in a small, Connecticut town in the United States by the name of Cheshire. In June of 2007, he graduated from Princeton University with a degree in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs. Over the past two years, through his role as an asylum advocate, Joe has represented undocumented residents through the auspices of the Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinic. Joe has served as special assistant to Professor Deborah Anker, Director of HIRC, and he studied U.S. immigration policy under Dr. Douglas Massey, a proverbial expert in the field. He is currently on a Princeton University Fellowship in Maputo, Mozambique, working for a small NGO by the name of Jacana. In addition, Joe is involved in a collaborative, internet-based, non-profit enterprise by the name of www.ydoit.org. In his spare time, Joe loves to travel, hike, read, practice speaking Portuguese, and discuss foreign affairs.

  Works by Joseph E. Falit


Book Cover This ambitious work analyzes the past century of immigration policy in the United States in an effort to create a coherent framework for reform.
After reviewing the last century of immigration law, Falit goes on to present a morally and economically based lens for analysis. Falit then uses this lens to analyze recently implemented immigration policies, focusing largely on the era following IRCA.
In the last chapter, Falit proffers well-reasoned policy recommendations. This innovative and carefully researched novel was originally presented to the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University as an undergraduate thesis.
If one is looking to become acquainted with the immigration policy debate in the U.S., including relevant historical data, then look no further than Falit's book.

   

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