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Direct Democracy Rules
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03 November 2026

An essential guide to understanding how citizen lawmaking reshapes state immigration policy
Since 2010, state legislatures have enacted 1,644 statutes and resolutions regarding immigration, averaging about 329 laws each year. Nevertheless, the most controversial bills, the ones we remember and talk about, usually have some involvement with the direct democracy process: initiatives, propositions, and referendums designed by everyday citizens with little to no inside knowledge of politics. From driver’s licenses and in-state tuition, to English-only education and access to social services, citizens are fundamentally shaping state immigration policy.
In Direct Democracy Rules, Andrea Silva reveals how the frontlines of U.S. immigration policy have shifted from Congress to the states. While federal authority over immigration is well established, decades of legislative stalemate have created a vacuum that states, and citizens themselves, have rushed to fill. At the heart of Silva’s analysis is the powerful role of direct democracy mechanisms in allowing activists, advocacy groups, and political strategists to bypass legislatures entirely, advancing sweeping policies without compromise. In this system, a single vote at the state level can reshape the lives of millions and influence the national conversation on immigration.
Accessible, timely, and rigorously researched, Direct Democracy Rules ultimately frames these citizen-led battles over state policy as the new terrain of twenty-first century immigration politics.
"Democracy promises that the people rule, but Direct Democracy Rules reveals how profoundly the institutional rules themselves determine whether that promise holds. To better understand how immigration policy gets made in the United States, Silva expertly points us beyond the partisan battles of Washington D.C. and toward the states, where ballot initiatives and referendums have become powerful tools in shaping contests over driver's licenses and in-state tuition for undocumented immigrants. Rigorous and timely, this book forces a reckoning with what popular sovereignty really means for one of the most consequential policy debates of our time."