
Originally posted at America’s Voice.
Amanda Terkel at Think Progress cites a New York Times article today, in “Sotomayor’s opinion marks the Supreme Court’s first use of the term ‘undocumented immigrant:’”
Yesterday, the Supreme Court “released its first four decisions in argued cases this term,” including one marking Justice Sonia Sotomayor’s debut. The case concerned “whether federal trial-court rulings concerning the lawyer-client privilege may be appealed right away,” to which Sotomayor said no. The New York Times notes one particularly noteworthy part of Sotomayor’s opinion:
In an otherwise dry opinion, Justice Sotomayor did introduce one new and politically charged term into the Supreme Court lexicon.
Justice Sotomayor’s opinion in the case, Mohawk Industries v. Carpenter, No. 08-678, marked the first use of the term “undocumented immigrant,” according to a legal database. The term “illegal immigrant” has appeared in a dozen decisions.
Terms like “illegal alien” and “illegal immigrant” are considered pejorative and offensive by immigrants rights organizations.
Culture Kitchen, a New York political blog, had this to say today about the term “illegal:”
Language matters in politics, especially in this digital age when repetition and redundancy are all what’s needed to establish the use of a term as eternally acceptable in the mainstream. Case in point: “Illegal Alien” is a nativist, bigoted and even bordering on racist term that has become common parlance in mainstream media.
Judge Sotomayor’s simple use of the term “undocumented” is sure to drive the anti-immigrant and anti-immigration crowd to distraction, so stay tuned for that.
In the meantime, I’ll leave you with a snippet from “Justice Sotomayor Makes a Difference!” In it, ImmigrationProfBlog argues:
As Bill Hing has previously posted on ImmigrationProf, and I have written on Concurring Opinions, the choice of terminology — aliens. illegal aliens, illegal immigrants, undocumented immigrants, people — matters in the discourse over immigration. Consequently, by employing a more neutral term, Justice Sotomayor has added significantly to the Supreme Court’s dialogue on immigration, which is likely to be with us for the foreseeable future.
Categories: comprehensive immigration reform
