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Published bySteven Daniels Modified over 8 years ago
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Human Globetrotting as a Human Right? “Migration is not a criminal act. It’s a universal right: the right to seek work and the right to travel freely from one place to another.” –Jose Luis Gutierrez, Mayor of Ecatepec, Mexico, quoted in L.A. Times, Jan 31, 2008.
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Questions to Consider? Why does the notion of “migration as a right” work differently for certain immigrants? Again, in considering the same question: What’s the essential difference between, soldiers of fortune, explorers, captains of industry, pilgrims, adventurers, royalists who were given charters by the English Crown versus, e.g., Mexican, Chinese, and Japanese immigrants?
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Immigration in the 20s Rebirth of kkk Fear of radicalism Eugenic aesthetic Sacco and Vanzetti Immigration Restriction Leagues Immigration Restriction Act 1921/1924 Ellis Island Myth
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Nativist Sentiments Run High Resurgence of the KKK, 19
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Fear of Political Radicalism
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Sacco and Vanzetti – Intersection of the fear of radicalism, anti-immigration sentiment, and eugenics
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Used in congressional hearing in 1921 and 1924 Madison Grant, The Passing of the Great Race (1916) Carl Brigham, A Study of American Intelligence (1924)
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Immigration Restriction and Other Eugenicists: Prescott Hall, Charles Davenport, Harry Laughlin
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Immigration Restriction Results in 1921 Emergency Quota Act – 3% of number of foreign born according to 1910 Census, which results accepting ca. 55% from Northern and Western Europe and ca. 45% from other nations (As of 1917 Asiatic Barred Zone excludes all Asians from migrating except for Filipinos and Japanese) 1924 Immigration Restriction Act (Johnson-Reed Act) informed by Eugenics results in 2% of foreign born according to 1890 Census, which was before the arrival of the bulk of S. and E. Europeans. (Leads to 85% N/W European migration). Excludes all Asians except Filipinos.
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Lady Liberty
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Ellis Island North
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Castle Garden, NY 1830-1892
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El Paso, Texas
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Angel Island, 1910
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Key Periods in Mexican American History Pre-1848 After Mexican-American War 1846-48 Mexican Revolution 1910 WWI/Depression Years and Repatriation WWII and Mexican American Generation Sleepy Lagoon Murder Case 1942/Zoot Suit Riots1943 Bracero Program 1942
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Key Periods in Mexican History Pre 1848: Mexican Independence (Victoria, Guerro, Herrera) U.S. surplus investment builds infrastructure; displaces local economy; helps to create workers on the move (COMING and GOING)) After Mexican-American War 1846-48: low immigration; Gold Rush Displaces local Californios and Mexicans; foreign miner’s tax; massive shift in ethnic population from Spanish-speaking peoples to Anglo; Homestead Act, 1862 disregards Mexican land grants (LEAVING) Porfiriato 1870s;1880s modernization (COMING AND GOING) Mexican Revolution 1910: increased immigration along side self- repatriation after Revolution (COMING AND GOING) WWI: need for labor; many self-repatriate due to conscription (COMING AND GOING) Depression: Severe econ. Situation; Official repatriation 1929-31 (GO) WWII: need for labor (COME) Bracero Program 1942-1964 1950s: (Go); 1960s and ‘70s (COME); 1980s (COME) w/ 2 million receiving Amnesty; 1990s (COME/ US policy NAFTA) (GO/Public Sentiment);21 st : (GO)
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Migration and Web of Industrial Capitalism
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Mexican Repatriation, 1929, LA Union Station
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Filipino Pensionados
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First Wave, 1903-1934; Pinoys
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Filipino Cannery Union, 1930s – “Alaskeros”
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