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Early Us Immigration Policy Essay

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U.S immigration policies embodied a cosmopolitan faith in the capacity of individuals, whether native- or foreign-born, for rational self-rule. Early U.S immigration policies like the Chinese Exclusion Act and the Gentlemen’s agreement began when influxes of chinese and japanese immigrants moved to america after the civil war. Because they excelled in mining, agriculture, transportation, construction and business, they were hated by the majority and these two policies set limits on the number of immigrants that was allowed to come. In 1921 Congress Passed the First Quota Act, which ranked immigrant nationalities according to a discriminatory hierarchy of quotas . The act ruled that the number of aliens admitted annually from any country could not exceed 3 percent of the foreign-born of that nationality in the United States in 1910 . The resultant quotas were …show more content…

From the 1920s to the 1950s, more than 1.4 million Canadians arrived in the United States ; three quarters came from British Canada and one-quarter from French Canada.More than 840,000 Mexicans came as permanent settlers and 4 .7 million more arrived as temporary guest workers. Canadian and mexican immigrants wasn’t a target of restrictions compared to Europeans and asians in the first half of the twentieth century. The Bracero program started in 1942, it admitted farmworkers on short-term contracts that guaranteed work and living arrangement. The influx of braceros peaked in 1959 when 450,000 entered the country . In 1960, they made up 26 percent of the nation's migrant farm labor force . By the end of the bracero program in 1967, 4.7 million Mexican laborers had entered the United States under its terms. Thousands of mexicans overstayed their work work permits. The government took action on this with, “Operation Wetback” which expelled 3.8 million Mexicans out of the

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