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  • ...e influence of California’s harsh nativist movement on labor and broader immigration issues. Additionally, domestic agricultural producers by the 1920s viewed t ...ctional approach that so many assumed found itself foundering on increased immigration to the United States as racial nativists viewed this migration hostilely as
    11 KB (1,639 words) - 19:56, 21 June 2012
  • ...side national membership, serves as a critical ground for reimaginings. If immigration has been the site of both othering and “the emergence of critical negatio ...udes, the regulated sites just mentioned, are “profoundly transformed by immigration and altered by the immigrant cultures and practices that merge in contradic
    11 KB (1,530 words) - 09:57, 27 March 2013
  • ...on of thousands of black slaves in the South and coincided with a surge of immigration to United States by people from southern and eastern Europe as well as from ...ulations. It is important to note that the age of emancipation, heightened immigration, and the nationalization of citizenship coincided with the period in which
    32 KB (4,839 words) - 15:43, 1 July 2012
  • ...ishment in America’s oldest colony. As mortality rates declined, English immigration diminished, competition with sugar plantations in the West Indies receded,
    43 KB (6,575 words) - 18:57, 20 June 2012
  • ...d other cultural artifacts.” Additionally, as such areas draw increasing immigration, the informal economy expands since its formal counterpart cannot absorb th ...e such divisions are relevant, Sassen notes a key aspect of this “new” immigration, “is the increase in the supply of female immigrant workers”. Providing
    80 KB (11,766 words) - 18:49, 20 June 2012
  • ...e influence of California’s harsh nativist movement on labor and broader immigration issues. Additionally, domestic agricultural producers by the 1920s viewed t ...ctional approach that so many assumed found itself foundering on increased immigration to the United States as racial nativists viewed this migration hostilely as
    94 KB (14,200 words) - 18:52, 20 June 2012
  • ...although, Perlman contributes two important conclusions of his own. First, immigration waves (i.e. 1870-1920) produced severe ethnic cleavages and the influx of t
    31 KB (4,788 words) - 18:59, 20 June 2012
  • Mexican immigration to the Untied States has been an ongoing process for over one hundred years ...(actually this was established under the Agricultural Act of 1949) and the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (also known as rhe McCarran-Walter Act or Publi
    62 KB (9,255 words) - 19:55, 20 June 2012
  • ...suffers from a failure to highlight that “many economists disagree that immigration is the reason for high black employment,” she levels the debate among eco
    5 KB (802 words) - 01:21, 21 June 2012
  • ...ystem of slavery in the South and the rising population of the North (from immigration) increased tensions between the two regions. Along with these differences,
    35 KB (5,367 words) - 01:23, 21 June 2012
  • ...led to a shift in how politics mobilized. Industrialization, urbanization, immigration/migration, technological advance and numerous other factors altered how peo
    32 KB (4,710 words) - 01:27, 21 June 2012
  • ...ited from the expansion of academia into areas such as gender, ethnic, and immigration studies which have enabled historians to explore a greater variety of women ...veral issues that drove Progressive reformers including commercialization, immigration, unfair business practices, monopolization, and alienation/lonlieness drive
    40 KB (5,844 words) - 01:29, 21 June 2012
  • ...d other cultural artifacts.” Additionally, as such areas draw increasing immigration, the informal economy expands since its formal counterpart can not absorb t
    6 KB (828 words) - 21:11, 5 July 2012
  • ...te more broadly, limiting capital and labor flows (especially in regard to immigration), reducing economies of agglomeration (i.e. they become easy targets and on
    8 KB (1,243 words) - 21:11, 5 July 2012
  • ...e publicly is not discussed adequately for Andrew’s taste. Additionally, immigration never enters into Solboul’s analysis, yet Andrew argues for its importanc ...themselves? Why would they choose such alliances and what was the role of immigration in the Revolution?
    15 KB (2,281 words) - 19:59, 30 June 2012
  • ...e economy displayed far greater government intervention, a notable lack of immigration replacing it with migration from rural Japanese areas.. there are other dif ...kewise, Sassen points out, more so in New York and London than Tokyo, that immigration has produced a sort of low cost gentrification as older decaying neighborho
    9 KB (1,409 words) - 12:32, 5 September 2012
  • ...e such divisions are relevant, Sassen notes a key aspect of this “new” immigration, “is the increase in the supply of female immigrant workers”. Providing ...er se or an import from the less developed world brought in by the massive immigration flux.” Similarly, such developments result in the increasing employment o
    8 KB (1,186 words) - 19:53, 30 June 2012
  • ...e that gave government officials the broad discretionary power to restrict immigration on the basis of perceived economic needs. “ Even Japan and India adopt th ...icy often wittingly or unwittingly reinforced the nonregenative aspects to immigration. For example, Chinese resentment against American exclusion acts predictabl
    11 KB (1,665 words) - 14:01, 1 July 2012
  • [[Category:Immigration]]
    2 KB (332 words) - 21:24, 28 June 2012
  • ...ged further colonization (using headrights both as an incentive to further immigration and a buffer between settled and Indian lands.) He then examines the next w
    6 KB (878 words) - 19:46, 30 June 2012

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