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Title A nation of immigrants reconsidered : US society in an age of restriction, 1924-1965 / edited by Maddalena Marinari, Madeline Y. Hsu, Maria Cristina Garcia
Published Urbana : University of Illinois, [2019]

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Description 1 online resource
Series Studies of world migrations
Contents Beyond borders : remote control and the continuing legacy of racism in immigration legislation / Elliott Young -- Gatekeeping in the tropics : US immigration policy and the Cuban connection / Kathleen López -- Contested terrain : debating refugee admissions in the Cold War / Laura Madokoro -- The geopolitical origins of the 1965 Immigration Act / David FitzGerald and David Cook-Martín -- Hunting for sailors : restaurant raids and the conscription of laborers during World War II / Heather Lee -- The state management of immigrant labor : the decline of the Bracero Program, the rise of temporary worker visas / Ronald L. Mize -- Setting the stage to bring in the 'highly skilled' / Monique Laney -- Japanese agricultural labor program : temporary-worker immigration, US-Japan cultural diplomacy, and ethnic community making among Japanese Americans / Eiichiro Azuma -- The undertow of reforming immigration / Ruth Ellen Wasem -- Foreign, dark, young, citizen : Puerto Rican youth and the forging of an American identity, 1930-70 / Lorrin Thomas -- Japanese war brides and the normalization of family unification after World War II / Arissa H. Oh -- Love as mirror and pathway : the undocumented emotive configuration of Mexican immigration / Ana Elizabeth Rosas -- Afterword : the black presence in US immigration history / Violet Showers Johnson
Summary "This anthology brings together leading scholars of migration, ethnicity, race, and labor in a broadly comparative reconsideration of how immigration policy became a site for reconfiguring international relations, realigning labor priorities, and reimagining the attributes of citizenship. The decades following the passage of the 1924 Immigration Act are usually viewed as a lull in the long history of immigration to the United States. Through a discriminatory system of national origins quotas, the immigration laws of the 1920s greatly reduced or barred altogether immigration from Asia, southern and eastern Europe, and other parts of the world in order to maintain the dominance of western and northern European stock. Four decades later, the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act (also known as the Hart-Celler Act) was credited with reopening America's gates, enabling much greater diversity in immigration, and "inadvertently" transforming the demographic composition of the United States. The essays in this anthology show that the 1965 Immigration and Nationality Act was not a dramatic departure from the status quo but rather emerged from the political struggles of the preceding four decades. Changing conceptions of race relations, citizenship, and America's role in the world, as well as new demands for specialized labor, produced a number of policy shifts that made the 1965 Immigration Act possible. The debates and struggles of the 1924-1965 period critically reshaped American society for decades to come in ways that reverberate to this day"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Description based on print version record
Subject Immigrants -- United States -- History -- 20th century
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Discrimination & Race Relations
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Minority Studies
LAW / Emigration & Immigration
Emigration and immigration
Emigration and immigration -- Government policy
Immigrants
SUBJECT United States -- Emigration and immigration -- History -- 20th century
United States -- Emigration and immigration -- Government policy
Subject United States
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Marinari, Maddalena, editor
Hsu, Madeline Yuan-yin, editor
García, María Cristina, 1960- editor.
LC no. 2019718318
ISBN 9780252050954
0252050959