U.S. Immigration: History and Current Issues Senior Capstone Ryan Rice Overview Breakdown of history of U.S. Immigration by eras: Open-Door Door-Ajar Pet-Door Revolving-Door Storm-Door Including Important Legislation and Court Cases Overview Following Historical Breakdown: Look at current societal impacts of immigration both legal and illegal. Assimilation Economics Bilingualism Multiculturalism National Security Open-Door Era Founding of the United States until 1880. Immigration= Relatively Easy and Encouraged. “Old-Wave” Immigrants primarily from Northwest Europe. 1789 Article 1, Section 8 grants Congress power “To Establish a Uniform Rule of Naturalization” Open-Door Era Naturalization Act of 1790 – First official act. Two-year residency requirement Revised in 1802 – Extended to five years Became the Five-Year Residency Act in 1813 1819 – Began documenting all immigrants as the left their ship Open-Door Era 1848 - Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo – Citizenship to those remaining in Territory cede by Mexico Two Waves: 1845-1854 and 1865-1875 First- Predominantly Irish and German Second – Included British and Scandinavian Open-Door Era 1862 – Homestead Act 1868 – Ratification of the 14th Amendment 1870 – Citizenship granted to those of African decent 1 million immigrants per year = 13% foreign born Gave rise to fear and anxiety in nativeborn Door-Ajar Era Began in 1880 and lasted 1920 Rate of 1 million per year continued Shift to South, Central and Eastern Europe Know-Nothings and Ku Klux Klan led restrictionist attitude. Door-Ajar Era 1882 – Chinese Exclusion Act – First piece of legislation aimed at a particular race or nationality. Virtually stopped Chinese immigration ten years. Reenacted in 1888, 1892 and 1904 Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 40,000 35,000 30,000 25,000 20,000 Chinese Immigrants 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 1881 1882 1883 1885 Door-Ajar Era 1885 – Foran Act – illegal to fund immigration of others. 1888 – Scott Act – extended Chinese Exclusion act ten years/ barred return. 1889 – Chae Chan Ping v. United States upheld Scott Act. Door-Ajar Era 1892 – Ellis Island 1894 – Bureau of Immigration 1898 – Wong Kim Ark v. United States: Native born are eligible for nat. even if parents are not. 1907 – Dillingham Commission: Led to the quota acts of the 1920s Pet-Door Era The Pet-Door Era – 1920-1965 Pro-restrictionist groups pushed for quota acts: 1921, 1924, 1929 Immigration shifted back to Northwest Europe. Era of restrictive legislation Pet-Door Era: Quota Acts 1921 – 3% of pop. Of a country as of 1910 census. only 4 million entered from 1920-1930 1924 – Johnson-Reed Act – 2% of pop. Of a country as of 1890 census. Brought about shift back to Northwest Europe Barred most Asians – “aliens ineligible for citizenship” 1929 – proportion of pop. Or of each nationality for 1920 census. Only 150,000 admitted. Decrease in Immigration 25,000,000 20,000,000 15,000,000 Immigrants 10,000,000 5,000,000 0 Door-Ajar Era Pet-Door Era Pet-Door Era 1922 – Cable Act – women can become naturalized unless married to ineligible alien. Labor Appropriations Act of 1924 Established the U.S. Border Patrol Great Depression Immigration slowed dramatically between 1929 and 1939 1940 – End of Depression – Congress passed Registration Law and Nationality Act Required all citizens to register address annually. Consolidated all naturalization policy into one Act. Pet-Door Era 1942 – Executive Order 9066 – Japanese Americans to relocation camps. 1943 – Hirabayashi v. United States upheld “military necessity” 1944 – Korematsu v. United States allowed for excluded zones 1952 – Immigration and Naturalization Act removed racial and national-origin barrier. Revolving-Door Era Began with the Immigration and Naturalization Act of 1965 Replaced quota system with preference system Immigration in the following decade was up 60% Act was amended in 1966 to allow for more refugees Revolving-Door Era 1967 Afroyim v. Rusk – Dual Citizenship 1970s – concerns over immigrants entering illegally 5.4 million immigrants entered 1978 – Pres. Carter – Select Commission on Immigration and Refugee Policy Recommended closing backdoor and opening front door. Revolving-Door Era 1980 Refugee Act 1986 – Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA) Immigration Act of 1990 (IMMACT) Culmination of IRCA and SCIRP 1993 - NAFTA Revolving-Door Era California passed Proposition 187 Claimed Illegal immigration was a financial burden LULAC et al. v. Pete Wilson et al. – declared 187 unconstitutional 1996 – Illegal Immigrant Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act (IIRIRA) Storm-Door Era Began in 2001 as a result of 9/11 terrorist attacks 2001 – USA Patriot Act 2002 – INS is abolished and duties granted to Department of Homeland Security 2005 – USA Patriot Act Improvements and Reauthorization Act Current Immigration Issues Assimilation Economics Bilingualism Multiculturalism National Security Assimilation 1st step – Naturalization process Pre-1970s – Strong pressures on immigrants to assimilate into the culture Large numbers – fear that immigrants would not form emotional attachment to new country Assimilation Assimilate by acquiring skills Naturalization – more job opportunities Proponents: Immigrants have no problem assimilating Age is greatest distinguishing factor Economics Pros: more workers create more wealth provide basis for S. Security and Medicare most still pay income and property taxes benefit from brain-drain of other nations Economics Cons: Immigrant wages are decreasing Create a strain on taxpayers and government Tax burden in most states: couple hundred $/yr Bilingualism Economic and Ideological detriment Single language unifies incredible diversity Multiple languages are inefficient Argument for: too many Americans are illiterate anyway Multiculturalism Distinct Culture Groups Organizational and Conceptual Borders Maintain ties to home country, thus no true American identity Proponents: Proportion has remained stable over the years National Security Major Concern recently – Became important in 1920s 7,000 miles of border Department of Homeland Security Struggle until recently Advances in transportation security Creative thinking to prevent attacks Summary and Review Five Eras of Immigration: Open-Door, Door Ajar, Pet-Door, Revolving-Door, Storm-Door Immigration: history of legislation Current Issues: Assimilation, Economics, Bilingualism, Multiculturalism, and National Security