A related term,
anchor child, referring in this case to "very young immigrants who will later sponsor immigration for family members who are still abroad", was used in reference to
Vietnamese boat people from about 1987. In 2002 in the
Irish High Court,
Bill Shipsey used the term to refer to an Irish-born child whose family were his clients; in the 2003
Supreme Court judgment upholding the parents' deportation,
Adrian Hardiman commented on the novelty of both the term and concomitant argument. (In Ireland
jus soli citizenship was
abolished in 2004.) "Anchor baby" appeared in print in 1996, but remained relatively obscure until 2006, when it found new prominence amid the increased focus on the
immigration debate in the United States. The term is generally considered pejorative. Analysis of news usage, internet links, and search engine rankings indicate that
Fox News and
Newsmax were pivotal in popularizing the term in the mid and late 2000s. In 2011 the
American Heritage Dictionary added an entry for the term in the dictionary's new edition, which did not indicate that the term was disparaging. Following a critical blog piece by Mary Giovagnoli, the director of the Immigration Policy Center, a pro-immigration research group in Washington, the dictionary updated its online definition to indicate that the term is "offensive", similar to its entries on ethnic slurs. , the definition reads:
n. Offensive Used as a disparaging term for a child born to a noncitizen mother in a country that grants automatic citizenship to children born on its soil, especially when the child's birthplace is thought to have been chosen in order to improve the mother's or other relatives' chances of securing eventual citizenship. The decision to revise the definition led to some criticism from immigration opponents, such as the
Center for Immigration Studies and the Federation for American Immigration Reform. In 2012,
Utah attorney general Mark Shurtleff, in a meeting designed to promote the 2010
Utah Compact declaration as a model for a federal government approach to immigration, said that "The use of the word 'anchor baby' when we're talking about a child of God is offensive." Several journalists and public figures in the United States have been criticized for using the term
anchor baby. In
Australia in 2019, then-
home affairs minister Peter Dutton used "anchor babies" to label the two Australian-born children of the
Murugappan asylum seeker family, which opposition politician
Kristina Keneally said was an attempt to import American debates that were not relevant to Australia.
Maternity tourism industry , Los Angeles is considered the center of the maternity tourism industry, which caters mostly to wealthy Asian women; authorities in the city there closed 14 maternity tourism "hotels" in 2013.
Ireland's abolition of unconditional birthright citizenship In 2005, Ireland amended its
constitution to become the last country in Europe to abolish unconditional
jus soli citizenship, as a direct result of concerns over birth tourism. A headline case was
Chen v Home Secretary, whereby a Chinese temporary migrant living in mainland
United Kingdom travelled to
Belfast, Northern Ireland, to give birth to her daughter for the purpose of obtaining Irish citizenship for her daughter (Ireland's
jus soli law extends to all parts of the
island of Ireland, including Northern Ireland, which is part of the UK). The daughter's
Irish citizenship was then used by her parents to obtain permanent residence in the UK as the parents of a dependent EU citizen. ==Immigration status (United States)==