The Antislavery Origins of US Immigration Policy

被引:0
|
作者
Kenny, Kevin
机构
来源
JOURNAL OF THE CIVIL WAR ERA | 2021年 / 11卷 / 03期
关键词
COOLIES; AGE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
K [历史、地理];
学科分类号
06 ;
摘要
Congress played almost no role in regulating the entry of immigrants before the Civil Wan The states passed their own laws controlling the admission, exclusion, and expulsion of foreigners, as well as the movement office and enslaved African Americans. When a national immigration policy began to emerge for the first time during the Civil War, it was shaped by the dominant ideology of antislavery. In 1862 Congress passed legislation prohibiting American involvement in the so-called coolie trade, equating the transportation of unfree Chinese laborers with slavery. Legislation passed in 1864, by contrast, gave federal recognition to the recruitment of European workers on short-term contracts. The 1862 law led indirectly to the exclusion of Chinese laborers in 1882, which was justified as an antislavery measure. The 1864 law, meanwhile, generated opposition to immigrant contract labor, also on antislavery grounds, culminating in the, prohibition of immigrant contracts under the Foran Act of 1885. In this way, Chinese migration was coded as inherently unfree, and European workers, liberated form the shackles of contract, emerged as America's archetypal immigrants. Together, these two developments during the Civil War laid the groundwork for the federal immigration system of the postbellum era.
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页码:361 / 381
页数:21
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