Immigration Policy. Immigrant Integration Policy.

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Presentation transcript:

Immigration Policy

Immigrant Integration Policy

Understanding Immigration Policy Debates Immigration Policy vs. Immigration Integration Policy Path Dependence and the Role of History Politics and Immigration: Strange Bedfellows Ambivalence about Immigrants Unintended Consequences

Comparative Perspective U.S. facing many of the same problems as other developed countries. U.S. has long history of immigration Is the U.S. a model for other countries?

Theories of Migration: What factors initiate international labor migration streams? Neoclassical Economic Theory – Push:unemployment, famine, war – Pull: high wages, better living conditions Individual Level, rational cost benefit calculations of wage differentials Predicts movement of individuals from capital poor and labor rich countries to capital rich and labor poor countries. Not good at explaining actual migration routes which are not from the poorest to the richest countries. Better at explaining permanent decisions to migrate but not good at explaining circular or temporary immigration.

Can we control immigration? Douglas Massey: The state can’t combat powerful economic globalization forces. – Migrants operate by more complex logics and keep coming despite it. Aristide Zolberg: What looks like a “failure” to control immigration sometimes reflects a fundamental ambivalence about whether or not the state really wants to control immigration (and arguably the U.S. does not). Attempts to control immigration often produce unintended consequences

Debates and Policy Formation in U.S. history: Who should we let in? Economic Considerations – Need for labor above all else Race and Ethnicity—cultural issues Nationalism, Political Loyalty Threats Foreign Policy Considerations

History of Immigration Law Long history of labor recruitment. Restrictions based on race and ethnicity. Citizenship denied to Asian immigrants. Immigration policy is about who is let in, not concerned with immigrant assimilation. Ambivalence about economics and culture.

Ties to 18 th Century? A minority of Americans have 18 th century American ancestors. American Indians 90% of African Americans About 1/3 of White Americans

1790 Population English48.3 African18.9 German 6.9 Scots 6.6 Unassigned 5.2 Scots-Irish 4.8 Irish 2.9 Dutch 2.7 Native American 1.8 French 1.8 Swedish1.8

History Immigration Law Pre-Restriction Era – Laws were about citizenship. Labor recruitment ongoing. First Restriction Era – Laws barring “undesirables”—convicts, prostitutes, lunatics, persons likely to become public charges. Eventually restricts admissions to literate people.

Naturalization is the only part of immigration in the Constitution 1790 Required 2 years residence years residence 1798 raised it to 14 years Alien and Sedition Act – Empowered the president to deport aliens considered dangerous to the US 1802 restored the 1795 act

19 th Century Immigration Active recruitment of labor by business Prepaid steamer tickets No restrictions. Minimal attention to immigrants Castle Garden opened in New York. Concern with health of immigrants.

19 th Century Immigration Why did people move? Drastic population increases Displacement of agricultural workers and traditional handicraft workers by industrial revolution. Religious persecution and political upheavals. Famine ( ) 1.2 million Irish

Peaks of Immigration 1840’s Germans and Irish – Germans fleeing failure of 1848 liberal revolution. Pre 1880 – Northern and Western Europe Great Britain, France, Germany, Netherlands, Scandinavian Countries – Southern and Eastern Europe

Nativist Reactions Anti Catholicism – Rise of Know Nothing Party in the 1850s – 1854 elections, Massachusetts – Elected mayor of San Francisco, Chicago, governor of California. Platform – Severe limits on immigration, especially from Catholic countries – Restricting political office to native born – Mandating 21 year wait until naturalization – Restricting public school teachers to Protestants – Mandating reading from Protestant bible in public schools.

Asian Immigration Chinese first came during the gold rush, Faced bitter discrimination from beginning ,000 Chinese immigrants. Sojourners.

1842 Encyclopedia Britannica – A Chinaman is cold, cunning and distrustful; always ready to take advantage of those he has to deal with; extremely covetous and deceitful; quarrelsome, vindictive, but timid and dastardly. All ranks and conditions have a total disregard for truth.

Recruited for Manual Labor Railroads, mining Leland Stanford, president of Central Pacific Railroad – Quiet, peaceful, industrious, economical They were paid the same as whites, but fed and housed themselves, costing only two thirds as much as whites.

1865 New York Times We have four million degraded negroes in the South, and if there were to be a flood tide of Chinese population—a population befouled with all the social vices, with no knowledge or appreciation of free institutions or constitutional liberty, with heathenish souls, and heathenish propensities, whose character and habits and modes of thought are firmly fixed – we should be prepared to bid farewell to republicanism and democracy.

History of Immigration Law First Restriction Era – Chinese Exclusion Act. – Gentleman’s Agreement with Japan – Dillingham Commission 1907 – Asiatic Barred Zone

1882 Chinese Exclusion Act – Restricts all Chinese laborers – Bars Chinese naturalization Immigration Act of 1882 – Specifically made regulation of immigration the duty of the Federal Government (Treasury) – Barred those likely to become public charges

Asian Immigration Pre 1882 Chinese immigrants Japanese Filipinos Punjabi Sikhs