Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMerry Matthews Modified over 8 years ago
2
What is an immigrant? Why do people immigrate? Why does the U.S. control who is able to immigrate?
3
1890-1924: Period of greatest immigration Ellis Island: 1892 – 1924: ◦ 12 million had entered by 1954 when closed WWI generates Italian, Slav, Greek, Polish, Jewish immigrants (Southern Europe) ◦ People immigrate during hard times.
4
Limits usually accompanied by anti immigrant, xenophobic campaigns e.g., anti Chinese movement in midst of 1870 US depression. Up to 1850s – 85% of immigrants were English, Scotch Irish, and German; all other groups suspect because “Not like us.” After WWI: door slammed shut: ◦ 1900-1915: 15 million enter U.S. ◦ 1915-1930: 5.5 million enter U.S.
5
1917: Literacy Act – very exclusionary ◦ need to write or speak English and another language ◦ aims to exclude southern Europeans, Jews, excluded all Asians. ◦ 9 th Proviso: exception for farm workers, mostly Mexicans.
6
1918-1921: Red scare aggravates fear & anti-immigrant reaction. 1921-1924: Quota Law – 1st time numerical limits; uses 1910 proportion, favoring north Europeans. Border Patrol created; Mexican border becomes a tangible reality, though still permeable.
7
1986: Immigration Reform & Control Act (IRCA): 2 step legalization process, legalizing 2.5 million (“amnesty”), less than expected, who fulfill restrictive criteria. Employer sanctions Outlaws unfair immigration related employment practices
8
1996: Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) hastily passed on eve of threatened government shutdown (9/30). ◦ Harshest law in U.S. history Retroactively increased grounds of deportability Mandated 10-year bar to return for residing illegally in U.S. for a year or more. Permanent bar for false claim to U.S. citizenship
9
2001: Pres Fox receives standing ovation when calls for broad legalization before joint Congress 9/11: Hope-filled meeting between Fox and Pres Bush for 9/13 canceled. They never meet. Severe tightening of immigration procedures ◦ 2003: Homeland Security takes over INS role ◦ Immigration takes on anti-terrorism flavor ◦ All applications take much longer to process
10
Increased enforcement in 2007 Congress approves 700 miles of fence, more $ for border patrol officers and technology Deportations escalate, 270,000 in FY 07, most in history. More detention space funded, detention soars to 27,000. Minutemen created as vigilante force.
11
Municipalities & states pass strict laws: Oklahoma: harshest law making any aid to illegal immigrants a crime. Waukegan & many other cities require police to ask for ID and if none, to turn over persons to ICE. Arizona law fines and then cancels business licenses of those caught hiring undocumented people.
12
1950s: 2.5 million 1960s: 3.3 million 1970s: 4.5 million 1980s: 7.3 million 1990s: 9.1 million Today: 11-12 million?
13
The Arizona state government passed a law that would allow law enforcement to question immigration status of anyone they have suspicion of being in the country illegally.
14
Arizona politicians claim that they want to discourage illegal entry into U.S. and minimize illegal economic activity. ◦ Why would Arizona want to address this issue? ◦ What do you think are some issues with this bill? (There is a lot of controversy)
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.