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Caribbean Migration to the United States

Caribbean Migration to the United States. AS/HUMA 1300 9.0 Faculty of Arts April 22, 2009. 1. Caribbean and the Migration Imperative 2. US Immigration Policy (1900-post 1965) 3. Caribbean Immigrants’ Economic and Political Contributions to the United States 4. The Case of Haiti.

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Caribbean Migration to the United States

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  1. Caribbean Migration to the United States AS/HUMA 1300 9.0 Faculty of Arts April 22, 2009

  2. 1. Caribbean and the Migration Imperative 2. US Immigration Policy (1900-post 1965) 3. Caribbean Immigrants’ Economic and Political Contributions to the United States 4. The Case of Haiti Caribbean Migration to USA

  3. 1.The Caribbean as a Diaspora 2.Post-slavery migration and the the US dollar - Panama Canal (approx. 130, 000 workers: 1904-14); - agricultural labor (Cuba, DR, Costa Rica, Honduras); 3.Caribbean migration to Britain (230,000-280,000: 1951-1961); Caribbean and the Migration Imperative

  4. “I think God made all people good, but if we had to take a million immigrants in, say Zulus next year, or Englishmen, and put them in Virginia, what group would be easier to assimilate and would cause less problems for the people of Virginia?” (This Week with David Brinkley,ABC-TV) Patrick Buchanan on US Immigration Policy (1991)

  5. “Integration of blacks and whites . . . is less likely to result in accommodation than it is in perpetual friction, as the incapable are placed consciously by government side by side with the capable.” Patrick Buchanan

  6. Steady increase in immigrants from less than 1,000 in 1899 to over 12,000 by 1924 Motivated by economic reasons Belonged largely to the Caribbean middle- Classes Most went to northern cities, like NYC Paralleled by movement of African Americans out of the South Caribbean Migration to the US: 1900-1924

  7. In 1921, a per-country cap was set at 3% of foreign- born persons of a given nationality living in the US as of 1910. This cap also limited the world visa quota to 350,000. In 1924, the National Origins Act reduced cap to 2% of foreign-born persons living in the US in 1890. The revised cap reduced the worldwide quota to 175,000, giving preference to Western European migration. US Immigration Policies: Quotas of the 1920s

  8. Caribbean immigrants leaving exceeded those arriving during this period. Immigrants were mainly family members(children and spouses) joining families, and students on visas. 1952: McCarran-Walter Act introduced a new four-tier preference system . Cuban refugees: 1959-1961 over 100,000. Caribbean Migration to the US: 1924-1960

  9. 1965 Hart Cellar Immigration Reform Act eliminated national quota system and set uniform country quotas of 20,000. Act prioritized family reunification over education and skill. Act still ensured economic and political contributions to the US. Caribbean Migration to the US: 1965-present

  10. Jean Bertrand Aristide

  11. Aristide returns to power in 1994

  12. Haitian Refugees On January 1, 2000, more than 400 Haitian refugees were intercepted off the Florida coast in a dangerously overcrowded boat. Since the refugees are considered to be fleeing poverty rather than political oppression, they are rigorously returned.

  13. Haitian Migrant Interdictions at Sea, October 2003 to March 2004

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