Citizenship Denied: Implications of the Naturalization Backlog for Noncitizens in the Military

Author: 
Ming Hsu Chen
Date of Publication: 
February, 2020
Source Organization: 
Other

The immigration system is in crisis. Long lines of asylum seekers at the border and immigrants in the interior spend years waiting for their day in immigration court. This is true in the agencies that process applications for immigration benefits from legal immigrants as well. Since 2016, delays in naturalization have increased to historic proportions. The problem is even worse for military naturalizations, where delays are accompanied by denials and overall declines in military naturalizations. It is the latest front in the battle on legal migration and citizenship. These impediments to citizenship demonstrate an extreme form of policies collectively dubbed the “second wall.” These policies are animated by mistrust of foreigners and immigrant restrictionism, bureaucratic bungling and institutional neglect for service members, and overreliance on national security justifications. These changes affront civil and voting rights for immigrants, diminish military enlistment, and undermine the institutions of citizenship and democracy. This Article documents barriers to citizenship. More specifically, it analyzes the causes and consequences of citizenship denials in general and military naturalization. It offers solutions that bolster immigrants, the military, and the meaning of citizenship for those seeking to obtain it and confronting institutional barriers.

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Citation: 

Chen, M. H. (2020, February 15). Citizenship denied: Implications of the naturalization backlog for noncitizens in the military (University of Colorado Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 20-8). https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3547114

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