1. Unregulated immigration and its opponents, from colonial America to the mid-nineteenth century

David A. Gerber
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Abstract

Colonial British North America was a melting pot for northern and western Europeans, with a majority white population from Great Britain. Colonial authorities encouraged immigration because of a need for labor. Immigration, both bonded and voluntary, supplemented the slave trade as a labor source. The same economic logic was present after the United States was founded in 1789, but, amid unregulated massive immigrations from northern and western Europe, suspicions based on race, nationality, and religion grew about the suitability of the immigrants for American citizenship, as did fears about their negative impact on American life. Thus, from the start, Americans looked in different directions when considering immigration. Immigrants were economically beneficial, yet too many of them were thought dangerous in variety of ways. In fear of immigrant political power, the American Party emerged in the 1850s, arguing unsuccessfully for extension of the period necessary for residence to become a citizen and vote.
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1. 从殖民时期的美国到19世纪中期,不受管制的移民及其反对者
英属北美殖民地是北欧和西欧人的大熔炉,其中大多数是来自英国的白人。殖民当局鼓励移民,因为需要劳动力。移民,包括保税移民和自愿移民,作为劳动力来源补充了奴隶贸易。1789年美国成立后,同样的经济逻辑也出现了,但是,在北欧和西欧不受管制的大规模移民中,基于种族、国籍和宗教的怀疑越来越多,对移民是否适合美国公民身份的怀疑也越来越多,对他们对美国生活的负面影响的担忧也越来越多。因此,从一开始,美国人在考虑移民问题时就有不同的视角。移民在经济上是有益的,但他们中的太多人在各种方面被认为是危险的。出于对移民政治力量的恐惧,19世纪50年代出现了美国党(American Party),该党主张延长成为公民和投票所需的居留期限,但没有成功。
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2. Regulation and exclusion 5. Mass population movements and resettlement, 1965 to the present 6. The widening mainstream 4. Mass population movements and resettlement, 1820–1924 7. The future of assimilation
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