Who Can Come
Tags: EMIGRATION & immigration law -- United States; UNITED States -- Foreign relations
Related Articles
- Less-busy border may mean Mexicans are staying home. // Christian Science Monitor;2/8/2001, Vol. 93 Issue 52, p4
Reports on the decline in arrests of illegal immigrants along the United States-Mexican border and the thought that it is due to Mexico's growing economy.
- The Sino-American Alliance During World War II and the Lifting of the Chinese Exclusion Acts. Xiaohua Ma // American Studies International;Jun2000, Vol. 38 Issue 2, p39
Examines how the United States transformed its policy to promote China as an equal state in international relations during World War II. Formation of the Chinese Exclusion Policy; Emergence of the Sino-American alliance; Significance of the repeal of the anti-Chinese immigration laws.
- Officials hope bill averts snarl at border. Mercer, Tenisha // Crain's Detroit Business;07/06/98, Vol. 14 Issue 27, p10
Reports that United States (US) and Canadian officials are hoping for the approval of Section 110 of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996, when the Senate convenes in July 1998. How this law would impact on the entry and exit controls on non-US citizens...
- 'Amnesty' may trigger border rush. McLaughlin, Abraham; Axtman, Kris; Miller, Sara; Wood, Daniel B. // Christian Science Monitor;7/26/2001, Vol. 93 Issue 169, p1
Focuses on a plan of United States President George W. Bush which may allow Mexicans living illegally in the U.S. to become permanent residents. View that the plan may spark a surge of illegal immigration from Mexico; Description of efforts of Mexican residents to cross the border into the...
- U.S. IMMIGRATION POLICY TOWARD MEXICO IN A GLOBAL ECONOMY. Sassen, Saskia // Journal of International Affairs;Winter90, Vol. 43 Issue 1, p369
Focuses on the immigration policy of the U.S. towards Mexico. Immigration policies of the U.S. since 1965; Impact of internationalization of the U.S. economy on immigration patterns; Effects of the growth of U.S. foreign investment and Mexican emigration.
- Treaty regulating Chinese immigration. // Treaty Regulating Chinese Immigration;2009, p237
Provides information about the 1881 treaty between China and the United States, regulating Chinese immigration to the United States. Suspension of Chinese immigration; Rights of Chinese in the United States; Protection of Chinese in the United States; Notification of legislation.
- Wilson Was Wrong. // Saturday Evening Post;10/17/1931, Vol. 204 Issue 16, p24
Expresses views on the immigration policy of the U.S. under the administration of President Woodrow Wilson. Reaction to the surge of European immigrants in the country; Possible threat posed by the proposed increase in taxes; Need for the country to stop meddling with the affairs of Europe.
- Barricading the Border. Nevins, Joseph; Dunn, Timothy // NACLA Report on the Americas;Nov/Dec2008, Vol. 41 Issue 6, p21
The article provides a historical overview of the hundreds of miles of barricades along the boundary between the U.S. and Mexico. Through most of the 20th century, these barricades were few and far between, located in urbanized areas and often in a state of disrepair and easily breachable. The...
- Proclamation 7062--Suspension of entry as immigrants and... Clinton, William J. // Weekly Compilation of Presidential Documents;1/19/98, Vol. 34 Issue 3, p63
Presents the text of the proclamation 7062 given by the president of the United States on January 14, 1998 which deals with the suspension of entry as immigrants and nonimmigrants of persons who are members of the military junta in Sierra Leone and members of their families.


