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- W263685004 abstract "The author traces demographic history of United States with particular reference to immigration and impact of changes in pattern of post-World War II immigrants on cultural, fiscal, and economic condition of United States. Consideration is also given to constitutional implications of privileges extended to U.S. territories in Pacific. Key Words: Demography, Migration, U.S. Immigration Policy, Pacific territories, Bi-lingualism, Multi-Culturalism and Crime During past thirty-two years, Congress has enacted laws on immigration, citizenship, and territorial powers which are deconstructing United States as both a nation and a federal polity. For nearly two hundred after its independence from Great Britain in 1783, United States was demographically a nation with never less than 81 percent of being of European, and overwhelmingly Northern European, ancestry. As recently as 1950, European-Americans still constituted 90 percent of total of United States. The Changed Pattern of Immigration But all this has changed under continuing impact of 1965 Immigration and Naturalization Act Amendments. The Congressional sponsors of this legislation publicly and repeatedly told citizens of United States it: (1) would not increase annual levels of immigration, (2) would not lower standards for admission, (3) would not redirect immigration away from Europe, and (4) would not alter demographic make-up of United States. For example, Senator Robert Kennedy declared the new immigration act would not have any significant effect on composition of U.S.1 His brother, Senator Edward Kennedy, floor manager of bill in Senate, asserted bill is not concerned with increasing immigration to this country, nor will it lower any of high standards we apply in selection of immigrants.2 And Representative Emanuel Celler, dean of House in 1965 and a Congressional opponent of U. S. immigration policy since 1924, insisted the effect of bill would be 'quite insignificant' on U. S. population and that bill would not let in 'great numbers of immigrants from anywhere', including Africa and Asia.3 What Senators and Congressman emphatically proclaimed as truth proved to be totally untrue. Between 1968, year when 1965 immigration law fully took effect, and 1996, annual level of legal immigration skyrocketed from approximately 300,000 to nearly one million. During 147 years between 1820 and 1967, of 44 million immigrants legally admitted to United States 80 percent came from Europe while another 9 percent came from Canada.4 As a result of 1965 immigration act, of more than 19 million immigrants legally admitted to United States in 28 years between 1968 and 1996 approximately 83 percent came from somewhere other than Europe or Canada. Asia and Pacific islands accounted for more than six million or 34 percent of total; Latin America and Caribbean islands accounted for almost nine million or 46 percent, and Africa accounted for nearly half a million or about 3 percent.5 During last 28 years, immigration from Europe totaled less than 3 million or barely 15 percent of all legal immigration while immigration from Canada amounted to less than half a million or less than 3 percent of total. This decline from 1820-1967 levels is more pronounced than these statistics reveal. While immigration from Asia means Asian immigrants, and immigration from Latin America means, with exception of Brazil and Haiti, ethnic Hispanic immigrants, immigration from Europe and Canada does not mean European immigrants. Africans, Asians, and Latin Americans are able to immigrate to various European countries, as well as to Canada, then remigrate to United States under quotas for those countries. …" @default.
- W263685004 created "2016-06-24" @default.
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- W263685004 date "2015-04-01" @default.
- W263685004 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W263685004 title "Deconstruction in America" @default.
- W263685004 doi "https://doi.org/10.2307/jj.3643613.12" @default.
- W263685004 hasPublicationYear "2015" @default.
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