000858001 000__ 05086cam\a2200553\i\4500 000858001 001__ 858001 000858001 005__ 20210515160519.0 000858001 006__ m\\\\\o\\d\\\\\\\\ 000858001 007__ cr\cn\nnnunnun 000858001 008__ 190128r20192018nyua\\\\ob\\\\000\0\eng\d 000858001 020__ $$a9781786849489$$q(electronic book) 000858001 020__ $$z9781682177228 000858001 020__ $$z168217722X 000858001 035__ $$a(CaBNVSL)gtp00567892 000858001 035__ $$a(Credo)greyothi2018 000858001 035__ $$a(OCoLC)1083974852 000858001 035__ $$a(Credo)9781786849489 000858001 040__ $$aCaBNVSL$$beng$$erda$$cCaBNVSL$$dCaBNVSL 000858001 043__ $$an-us--- 000858001 050_4 $$aJV6450$$b.I87 2018eb 000858001 08204 $$a325.73$$223 000858001 1001_ $$aIssitt, Micah L.,$$eauthor. 000858001 24510 $$aImmigration /$$cMicah L. Issitt. 000858001 250__ $$a[Enhanced Credo edition] 000858001 263__ $$a20190206 000858001 264_1 $$aAmenia, NY :$$bGrey House Publishing,$$c[2018] 000858001 264_4 $$c©2018 000858001 26431 $$aBoston, Massachusetts :$$bCredo Reference,$$c2019. 000858001 300__ $$a1 online resource (40 entries) :$$billustrations 000858001 336__ $$atext$$2rdacontent 000858001 336__ $$astill image$$2rdacontent 000858001 337__ $$aelectronic$$2isbdmedia 000858001 338__ $$aonline resource$$2rdacarrier 000858001 4901_ $$aOpinions throughout history 000858001 504__ $$aIncludes bibliographical references. 000858001 5050_ $$aPublisher's note -- Introduction -- Historical timeline. -- 1. From immigration to sovereigns: the United States before nationhood -- 2. Becoming American: the naturalization process (1790-1798) -- 3. Friends and enemies: immigration and national security collide (1798) -- 4. The green menace: the Know-Nothings and the Nativist Movement (1800-1850s) -- 5. Marrying citizenship: women and immigrants' rights (1850-1855) -- 6. Encouraging immigration:the Civil War and the nation's first and only: pro-immigration period (1860-1864) -- 7. The color of citizenship: post-war immigration policy (1870-1875) -- 8. The east in the west: railroads, coolies, and racism (1800-1868) -- 9. The Chinese problem goes federal: racism becomes Federal law (1860-1890) -- 10. Centralizing immigration policy: the birth of the INS (1824-1891) -- 11. Symbolizing immigration: the Federal Immigration Centers (1892-1910) -- 12. The undesirables: eugenics and economics in immigrant exclusion policies (1840-1917) -- 13. The war on anarchy: the anarchist exclusion and Turner v. Williams (1886-1917) -- 14. The immigration race: World War I and the Immigration Act of 1917 -- 15. The end of mass migration: the beginning of the quota system (1920-1925) -- 16. Down Mexico way: Mexican repatriation and the Great Depression (1929-1939) -- 17. America's favored Asians: Chinese exclusion and Japanese internment (1941-1945) -- 18. America's reluctant humanitarianism: refugees during and after World War II (1937-1950) -- 000858001 5058_ $$a19. The last of western civilization: the Cold War and the McCarran-Walter Act (1950-1958) -- 20. Opportunity and exploitation: the Bracero Program (1917-1964) -- 21. Liberty and progress: Hart-Celler and the end of America's racial engineering (1960-1965) -- 22. Cold war refugees: the South Asian and Cuban refugee crises (1975-1980) -- 23. Aliens are out there: changing attitudes on immigration -- 24. Immigrant rights and welfare: immigrant children and the Sanctuary Movement (1980-1990) -- 25. The end of the Cold War: immigration law and diversity -- 26. Terrorism gets in the way: immigration and the Latino conservative movement -- 27. Immigration in the age of fear: from ICE to NSEERS to Islamophobia (2001-2008) -- 28. The great wall of America: the border wall debate -- 29. The American dreamers: the dreamers and DACA (2012-2018) -- 30. The fight for American ideology: the travel ban and American religious identity (2016-2018) -- 31. Open or closed: immigration and globalization -- Primary & secondary sources -- Glossary -- Historical snapshots -- Bibliography. 000858001 506__ $$aAccess limited to authorized users. 000858001 520__ $$aThis volume tracks the changing national views on immigration. Historian at-large Micah Issitt traces the path of public opinion and policy on immigration in American history, with each chapter providing insightful commentary on a selected primary source. Drawing from the popular press, key court and legislative battles, speeches, social activism and opinion polls, Opinions Throughout History-Immigration offers readers mixed sources of information woven together to highlight the overall momentum of developing public opinion on this perennial policy issue. 000858001 588__ $$aDescription based on title page of print version. 000858001 650_0 $$aEmigration and immigration law$$zUnited States$$vSources. 000858001 650_0 $$aNational characteristics, American$$vSources. 000858001 651_0 $$aUnited States$$xEmigration and immigration$$xHistory$$vSources. 000858001 7102_ $$aCredo Reference (Firm),$$edistributor. 000858001 77608 $$iPrint version:$$z168217722X$$z9781682177228 000858001 830_0 $$aOpinions throughout history. 000858001 85280 $$bebk$$hCredo Reference 000858001 85640 $$3Credo Reference$$uhttps://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=https://search.credoreference.com/content/title/greyothi?institutionId=3155$$zOnline Access 000858001 909CO $$ooai:library.usi.edu:858001$$pGLOBAL_SET 000858001 980__ $$aEBOOK 000858001 980__ $$aBIB 000858001 982__ $$aEbook 000858001 983__ $$aOnline