Skip to main content
Report

Naturalization of San Francisco Immigrants: The Surge in the 1990s

Authors:

  • Joanna Lee, University of California, Los Angeles
  • Paul Ong, University of California, Los Angeles

Abstract

This study examines naturalization rates among the Chinese-American population living in San Francisco during 1980-2000. This study compares the characteristics of Chinese immigrants in San Francisco who became citizens and those who have yet to become naturalized during this large wave of immigration and subsequent anti-immigrant legislation and sentiment. Previous research has examined Chinese immigrants on a larger scale; however, this study examines a smaller sample to account for differences associated with a specific region. Naturalization is the citizenship mechanism that grants immigrants constitutional rights and benefits as well as political participation in US society. Legal permanent US residents who are 18 years of age or older and have lived in the country for at least five years are eligible to gain citizenship (Rytina and Saeger, 2005). Becoming a citizen is the first benchmark toward immigrant civic participation. The rate of naturalization among Asian Pacific Americans determines the size of the APA population eligible to vote and also its political future as a voting base. In order to study immigrant Chinese voting behavior, it is necessary to first study the likelihood of naturalization among this group. Measuring naturalization rates over time and collecting demographic data aids in tracking the variation in the immigrant voter pool. A regression model is applied to study the influence of certain immigrant characteristics that influence the decision to naturalize. Characteristics such as age, sex, educational attainment, years of residence in the US, English language ability and place of birth have been thought to be strong indicators of naturalization rates among foreign-born populations (Ong and Nakanishi, 1996).