This document summarizes key policies and events related to Mexican immigration to the United States from the early 20th century to recent years. It outlines increasing restrictions on immigration through U.S. laws from 1903 to 1924. It then examines Mexican immigration and migration patterns from 1900-1930, the Great Depression and mass deportations, and the Bracero program from 1942-1964. The document also discusses immigration reform and control acts of 1986 and 1996, as well as more recent changes including DACA.
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HEALTH AND HISTORICAL LITERACY: THE ROLE OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES
1. HEALTH AND HISTORICAL LITERACY:
THE ROLE OF THE ARTS AND SCIENCES
ERASMO CORONADO GAMBOA
2. Review of early U.S. Immigration Policy; Increasing Restrictions
1903 Contract labor prohibited
1907 Head Tax, $4
1917 Literacy Requirement, head tax $8
1921 Immigration Act, limits through quotas 3% of 1910 population
1924 U.S. Border Patrol
1924 National Origins Act, Asian excluded, quotas at 2% of 1890 population
3. Immigrants,14 yrs. or older, who could neither read or write 1899-1910 by race or people
Neither read or write
4.
5. Outline: Mexican Immigration and Migration
General Overview
• 1900-1930 Open entry from Mexico
• Depression and deportation
• WWII State managed labor flows through contract labor (Braceros)
6. Alamo City, Texas, Labor Recruitment Agency for Employers in Northern States
8. State Managed Deportation as an Answer to Unemployment
• PECE, Jobs for Americans
• Public support for apprehension and removal of “undocumented immigrants”
• Los Angeles, California
• San Antonio, Texas
• Chicago, Illinois
• Total 600,000 (low estimate) 2 million (high estimate) including thousands (50%?) of American
citizens of Mexican descent
10. War and Post War Contract Labor Programs
• War Program, 1942-1947
• National Farm Labor Program
• ¼ million farm workers, food
processing
• 130,000 railroad workers, 1943-1945
• Post War Farm Program, 1947-1964
• Regional program, braceros no longer
contracted to all the U.S.
• Contracted exclusively to U.S. farms
• Over 5,000,000 contracted during post
war years.
The agreement:
• Manage Mexican immigration
• Temporary work force, system intended to force return and sidestep social
concerns
•Work contract guarantees basic social and work conditions but lax enforcement
renders work agreement null and practically worthless.
• Cheap, plentiful, and tractable labor for labor intensive industries
24. Mexico’s Economy Restructured 1960-1980s
• Key characteristics of the Mexican Economy
Between 1930-1970s, Mexico attempted to break dependency by pining economic
growth on “import substitution”
In 1970s turned to neo-liberal import export economy, increasing imports from the
U.S.
• Results GDP Fell:
1980 8.2% growth
1988 1.2% growth
1995 -1.1 negative contraction
1996 -.1 Year of Crisis
26. U.S. Immigration Policy and Mexico 1952-1980
• 1964 Bracero Program Ends
• 1965 National Origins System (1924)
Replaced With Preference System Based on
1. Family Reunification
2. Labor Market Needs
Number of Immigrants Determined by Hemispheric Limits
Favoring the Americas (120,000 from the Americas and 170,000 from the rest of the world)
• 1973 End to Preference for Immigration From the Americas
• 1976 Immigration Limits by Nationality (20,000) Extended to the Americas
27. 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA)
• Keys
1. Employer sanctions against hiring undocumented workers
2. System Alien Verification Entitlement (SAVE) Entitlement key issue
today control entry as well as the whole person of undocumented
immigrants
3. Amnesty, path to legalization with proof of continuous residence in
the U.S. prior to January 1982
4. Allowed for Contracting of Supplemental Temporary Legal
Agricultural Labor Special Agricultural Workers (Guest Workers)
28. Outcomes:
1. Lack of enforcement of employer sanctions, “knowingly hired”
2. Amnesty, proof of permanent residency gave rise to fear of not winning
amnesty and ensuing document black market
3. Undocumented remained in the shadow of immigration law
4. Beginning of end to circular migration between Mexico and the U.S. and
growth of resident population in response to border deterrence and growing
public anxiety over Mexican immigration
5. Beginning of dispersal away from traditional gateway cities and states to the
rest of the nation
6. SAW coupled to BIP and conditions in Mexico re-energizes culture of
immigration
Immigration cont.
29. Outcomes in Mexico:
1. Free trade market trade places Mexico’s industrial and farming economy
in an unfavorable position compared to the U.S.
2. Near collapse of farm sectors (apples, corn, livestock) in some areas of
Mexico
3. National manufacturing unable to complete with U.S. exports
4. Worsening balance of trade leads to renegotiation of loans to avert
bankruptcy
1994 North American Free Trade Agreement, NAFTA
30. The Mexican immigrant “threat” and the Public Response
• Four Levels of Public Response:
1. Federal, Congress
2. State Centered
Texas Tyler v. Doe 1982 “DACA”
California Prop 187 1992
Hazelton PA
3. Non-government organizations, Minute Men
31. 1996 Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act
• Increased border deterrence
doubled border patrol, fence
• Admission more stringent
125% above poverty levels
clean criminal record
no previous deportation
• Expedited removal, restricted judicial review
• Increased penalty for smuggling immigrants across border
• Resident aliens with felony convictions may be deported
• Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act
• Legal and undocumented immigrants no longer eligible for
federal public benefits
32. Recent Changes to Immigration Policy
• September 11, 2001- tightened security-accelerated deportations
• 2003, Homeland Security Act:
Immigration Naturalization Service Reorganized as Immigration and
Customs Enforcement (ICE)
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Naturalization and
Immigration
33. • 2008 Secure Communities Act:
Partnership between local, state, and federal governments to address
undocumented immigration
Identify and remove dangerous criminal aliens
Forecasts enforcement of immigration rules and deportation
Initially quotas set at 400K annually
2008 ICE and Local Law Officials operated in 14 jurisdictions
Today collaboration between ICE and local authorities ongoing in more than
1,210 communities
Changes cont.
34. Federal Directives: Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals DACA
• Congressional (house) Refusal to Act on Immigration Reform
• 2012 President Obama invoked executive power to order Homeland Security not to
deport certain undocumented youth immigrants
• DACA:
Relief from deportation for 2 years and renewable
Temporary residency not a path to citizenship
Allows undocumented youth to obtain a work permit
DACA determined on a case by case basis
born after 1981 and entered before 16 birthday
continued resident since 2007
not in immigration detention
high school graduate, served in military
no felonies or serious misdemeanors
pass background check