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Inventing the Immigration Problem : The Dillingham Commission and Its Legacy / Katherine Benton-Cohen.

De Gruyter Harvard University Press Complete eBook-Package 2018 Available online

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EBSCOhost Academic eBook Collection (North America) Available online

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Ebscohost Ebooks University Press Collection (North America) Available online

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eBook Diversity & Ethnic Studies Collection Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Benton-Cohen, Katherine, author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
United States. Immigration Commission (1907-1910)--Influence.
United States.
Demographic surveys--United States.
Demographic surveys.
United States--History--1901-1953.
United States--Emigration and immigration--Social aspects.
United States--Emigration and immigration--Government policy.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (353 pages)
Place of Publication:
Cambridge, MA : Harvard University Press, [2018]
Language Note:
In English.
Summary:
In 1907 the U.S. Congress created a joint commission to investigate what many Americans saw as a national crisis: an unprecedented number of immigrants flowing into the United States. Experts--women and men trained in the new field of social science--fanned out across the country to collect data on these fresh arrivals. The trove of information they amassed shaped how Americans thought about immigrants, themselves, and the nation's place in the world. Katherine Benton-Cohen argues that the Dillingham Commission's legacy continues to inform the ways that U.S. policy addresses questions raised by immigration, over a century later. Within a decade of its launch, almost all of the commission's recommendations--including a literacy test, a quota system based on national origin, the continuation of Asian exclusion, and greater federal oversight of immigration policy--were implemented into law. Inventing the Immigration Problem describes the labyrinthine bureaucracy, broad administrative authority, and quantitative record-keeping that followed in the wake of these regulations. Their implementation marks a final turn away from an immigration policy motivated by executive-branch concerns over foreign policy and toward one dictated by domestic labor politics. The Dillingham Commission--which remains the largest immigration study ever conducted in the United States--reflects its particular moment in time when mass immigration, the birth of modern social science, and an aggressive foreign policy fostered a newly robust and optimistic notion of federal power. Its quintessentially Progressive formulation of America's immigration problem, and its recommendations, endure today in almost every component of immigration policy, control, and enforcement.-- Provided by publisher
Contents:
Frontmatter
Contents
Introduction
1. The Professor and the Commission
2. The Gentlemen’s Agreement
3. Hebrew or Jewish Is Simply a Religion
4. The Vanishing American Wage Earner
5. Women’s Power and Knowledge
6. The American Type
7. Not a Question of Too Many Immigrants
Epilogue
Dillingham Commission Members and Selected Staff
Dillingham Commission Reports
Notes
Acknowledgments
Illustration Credits
Index
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed 29. Aug 2018)
ISBN:
9780674985643
0674985648
9780674985667
0674985664
OCLC:
1030578587

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