Still the Golden Door

Still the Golden Door
Author: David M. Reimers
Publsiher: Columbia University Press
Total Pages: 380
Release: 1992
Genre: History
ISBN: 0231076819

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This work updates an established American textbook on immigration and ethnic history, demonstrating the post-war shift from European to Third World immigrants. Extensive revisions include a discussion of undocumented immigration and the Simpson-Rodino Bill. All the important events of the last five years, especially the 1990 Immigration Act, are presented. The author examines the changes in refugee status and highlights the new wave of East European and Soviet immigrants to the USA.

Guarding the Golden Door

Guarding the Golden Door
Author: Roger Daniels
Publsiher: Macmillan + ORM
Total Pages: 335
Release: 2005-01-12
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9781466806856

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As renowned historian Roger Daniels shows in this brilliant new work, America's inconsistent, often illogical, and always cumbersome immigration policy has profoundly affected our recent past. The federal government's efforts to pick and choose among the multitude of immigrants seeking to enter the United States began with the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. Conceived in ignorance and falsely presented to the public, it had undreamt of consequences, and this pattern has been rarely deviated from since. Immigration policy in Daniels' skilled hands shows Americans at their best and worst, from the nativist violence that forced Theodore Roosevelt's 1907 "gentlemen's agreement" with Japan to the generous refugee policies adopted after World War Two and throughout the Cold War. And in a conclusion drawn from today's headlines, Daniels makes clear how far ignorance, partisan politics, and unintended consequences have overtaken immigration policy during the current administration's War on Terror. Irreverent, deeply informed, and authoritative, Guarding the Golden Door presents an unforgettable interpretation of modern American history.

Closing the Golden Door

Closing the Golden Door
Author: Anna Pegler-Gordon
Publsiher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 345
Release: 2021-10-28
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781469665733

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The immigration station at New York's Ellis Island opened in 1892 and remained the largest U.S. port for immigrant entry until World War I. In popular memory, Ellis Island is typically seen as a gateway for Europeans seeking to join the "great American melting pot." But as this fresh examination of Ellis Island's history reveals, it was also a major site of immigrant detention and exclusion, especially for Chinese, Japanese, and other Asian travelers and maritime laborers who reached New York City from Europe, the Americas and the Caribbean, and even within the United States. And from 1924 to 1954, the station functioned as a detention camp and deportation center for a range of people deemed undesirable. Anna Pegler-Gordon draws on immigrants' oral histories and memoirs, government archives, newspapers, and other sources to reorient the history of migration and exclusion in the United States. In chronicling the circumstances of those who passed through or were detained at Ellis Island, she shows that Asian exclusion was both larger in scope and more limited in force than has been previously recognized.

Beyond the Golden Door

Beyond the Golden Door
Author: Ali Master
Publsiher: Morgan James Publishing
Total Pages: 244
Release: 2019-05-14
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781642792874

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In this powerful and inspiring memoir, a Pakistani immigrant shares his story of finding new freedoms and a new faith in America. It’s easy to talk about freedom. But unless someone has lived in a world that suffocates freedom, it’s difficult to appreciate the liberty found in America. This is the true story of a Pakistani Muslim who immigrates to the United States for college and discovers five transformational freedoms along the way: the freedom to fail and start over, to love, to choose one’s faith, to be an entrepreneur, and to self-govern. Contrasting these precious freedoms with the life he lived in Pakistan, Ali’s story reveals that God is the true source of liberty as He works in people’s lives to bring about redemption. A call to value and preserve American freedoms, Beyond the Golden Door is also an invitation for readers to consider ultimate freedom in Jesus Christ.

Beside the Golden Door

Beside the Golden Door
Author: Pia M. Orrenius,Madeline Zavodny
Publsiher: AEI Press
Total Pages: 171
Release: 2010-08-16
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780844743523

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Beside the Golden Door: U.S. Immigration Reform in a New Era of Globalization proposes a radical overhaul of current immigration policy designed to strengthen economic competitiveness and long-run growth. Pia M. Orrenius and Madeline Zavodny outline a plan that favors employment-based immigration over family reunification, making work-based visas the rule, not the exception. They argue that immigration policy should favor high-skilled workers while retaining avenues for low-skilled immigration; family reunification should be limited to spouses and minor children; provisional visas should be the norm; and quotas that lead to queuing must be eliminated.

Safe Haven in America

Safe Haven in America
Author: Michael Wildes
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 200
Release: 2018
Genre: Emigration and immigration
ISBN: 1641051906

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Safe Haven in America: Battles to Open the Golden Door attempts to present the human face of the immigration, covering cases that are as fascinating as they are controversial.

The Golden Door

The Golden Door
Author: Thomas Kessner
Publsiher: New York : Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 258
Release: 1977
Genre: History
ISBN: UOM:39015046359355

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For the past two decades American scholars have been engaged in an intense examination of social mobility in American life. At the profoundest level, these studies examine the general notion that American society has been historically an open system which offered great opportunity for advancement to its poor and newcomers.

The Golden Door

The Golden Door
Author: A. A. Gill
Publsiher: Weidenfeld & Nicolson
Total Pages: 254
Release: 2013
Genre: United States
ISBN: 0753829169

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TRAVEL WRITING. Where were you when John F. Kennedy was shot? Today the answer more often than not is going to be 'not born'. You have to be some way past 45 to know where you were when Kennedy was shot in Dallas in 1963. A generation later, you could ask the same question about the World Trade Centre. Where were you when the plane hit the twin towers on 11 September 2001? But this book is about what happened between those two moments. The world's perception of America changed between those two waves. A.A. Gill's book is about the things he's always found admirable and optimistic about the United States and its citizens. Two of the happiest times of his life were spent living in New York and the mountains of Kentucky. The contrast between the two couldn't have been more complicated and different. The America he found was contradictory and elusive, not the simpletons' place he'd been led to believe.