Birth tourism and babies of immigrant mothers: the migration debate that is redefining citizenship in the U.S. today

In the United States there is a migration debate that, although it has occupied a central place in politics in recent months, stems from a small phenomenon: foreign women who travel to the country to give birth so that their children obtain U.S. citizenship automatically. Although the issue is not new and has been generating debate for years, today it has taken on a new dimension. It is no longer just about those trips, but about a deeper question: who has the right to citizenship in the United States.