The cost of coercion: Prospect theory and self-deportation
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Boyette, Jonathan
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Abstract
Attrition through enforcement (ATE) was developed as a response to large-scale
undocumented immigration to the United States over the last three decades. It is a twopronged
approach to regulating undocumented immigration by decreasing the
probability of securing employment in the United States while increasing the risk of
detention and deportation. Each of these approaches is coercive, relying on increasing
the threat of sanction as a consequence of non-compliance with law. Supporters of the
doctrine argue that undocumented immigrants, as rational decision makers, will make
the decision to self-deport in the face of increasing enforcement pressure, and that
sufficient enforcement pressure can be established at low expense. When the systematic
departures from rational decision-making described in prospect theory are applied to the
migration decision, the expected cost-effectiveness of ATE is lower than in a rational
model. This study concludes that where the assumption that undocumented immigrants
are rational decision makers is unrealistic, it will generate an overoptimistic assessment
of the capacity of coercive immigration policy to produce self-deportation.
