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Immigration Legislation. Acts and Laws. 1790 Naturalization Law. Set residence requirements at two years uniformly across all states. 1795 – moved it from 2 years to 5 years. 1819 1 st significant legislation. States must report to Fed Gov’t all immigration.
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Immigration Legislation Acts and Laws
1790 Naturalization Law • Set residence requirements at two years uniformly across all states. • 1795 – moved it from 2 years to 5 years
1819 1st significant legislation • States must report to Fed Gov’t all immigration
1864 Secretary of State takes control • Fed gov’t legalizes importation of contracted labor
1875 1st Restrictive Legislation • Prohibits entry of prostitutes, and criminals
1882 Exclusions extended • Prohibited “lunatics, imbeciles, and persons suffering from loathsome and contagious diseases.”
1882 Chinese Exclusion Act • 10 yr ban on all Chinese workers going into Calif. Renewed in 1892, 1902 (indefinitely)
1885 Labor Law changed • Contracted laborers were now banned • If you had a job coming in, you were taking one away from a citizen.
1888 Expulsions of Aliens • Provisions were adopted to provide for the expulsion of aliens. 1st process to kick people out.
1888 Scott Act • Prohibited Chinese from returning to Calif after a visit to China unless they had • $1000 of Land (it was illegal for non-citizens to own land) • Had relatives here in California
1903 – Consolidation of Immigration Laws • Polygamists (multi wife's) and political radicals were added to the exclusion list
1906 Procedural safeguards • Knowledge of English was made a basic requirement
More restrictions - 1906 • People with physical or mental defects, or tuberculosis, and children unaccompanied by parents. All were added to the exclusion list
1917 Added to the list • Illiterates, alcoholics, stowaways, and vagrants
1917 Literacy Act • Vetoes by the president in 1896, 1913, and 1915. • Immigrants must be literate in English, and pass a basic test to enter
1921 Quota Act • Annual quotas on the number of people admitted from a particular country • Denied women the right to share their husband’s citizenship • After World War I a marked increase in racism and the growth of isolationist sentiment in the U.S. led to demands for further restrictive legislation. In 1921 a congressional enactment provided for a quota system for immigrants, whereby the number of aliens of any nationality admitted to the U.S. in a year could not exceed 3 percent of the number of foreign-born residents of that nationality living in the U.S. in 1910.
1924 Johnson Red Act (National Origins Act) • 1st immigration law that establishes a preference quota system, and border control system • Limitation of certain national groups. 2% quota based on 1890 census – further restricts immigration from Europe (WWII)
1929 - Quotas of 1924 made permanent • 1st immigration law that establishes a preference quota system, and border control system • Limitation of certain national groups. 2% quota based on 1890 census – further restricts immigration from Europe (WWII)
1943 Bracero Program • Importation of migrant farm workers to help in the cultivation of crops in Calif
1943 Chinese Exclusion Act repealed • Needed China on our side during WWII • Limited number to 105 per year
1946 – Soldiers wives, children • Procedures to facilitate immigration of wartime romance/children
1948 – fleeing persecution • 1st policy developed to assist those fleeing persecution. Granted Asylum.
1951 – OZ effect • Labor increases from 41 million in 1920 to 66 million in 1951. • Migration from farm to city (oz effect) • Immigration from non-quota countries in Western Hemisphere –Puerto Rico, West Indies, etc • Bracero program
1952 – hemisphere limitations • Western Hemisphere unrestricted, Eastern Hemisphere - reaffirms quota system. • Created a preference for skilled workers and relatives of citizens
1952 McCarren Walter Act • Makes quota system more ridged, but allows all races • the basic immigration quotas were changed; the new law provided for annual immigration quotas for all countries from which aliens might be admitted. Quotas were based on the presumed desirability of various nationalities; aliens from northern and Western Europe were considered more desirable than those from southern and Eastern Europe. Aliens who fulfilled lawful residence requirements were exempt from quotas, as were alien wives, children, and some husbands of U.S. citizens.
1965 – National quota system abolished • Keeps policy by limiting 170,000 hemispheric and 20,000 per country ceilings to Eastern Hemispheric countries, favoring those who had relatives, special skills, etc • 120,000 ceiling on Western Hemisphere, but no preference
1976 reformed quota • 20,000 per country applied to Western Hemispheric nations.
1986 – IRCA (Immigration Reform & Control Act) • Legalized aliens who had resided in the US in an unlawful status since 1982. • Sanctions prohibiting employees from hiring, recruiting, or assisting in the importation of illegal aliens. • Creates new classification of temporary migrant worker
1995 - Prop 187 • Restricted medical care, schooling and immunization to legal residents of Calif. • Required county workers (teachers, hospital workers, etc) to turn-in/report suspected illegals.
2000 - Prop 227 • English Only legislation • 1 Year before English immersion