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| 1. |
Italian Immigration Into Canada: The Historical Process and Trends
(12 Pages, 143.4 USD)
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This is a 12 page paper discussing the historical process of Italian immigration into Canada. The process for Italian immigration into Canada has varied greatly in accordance with the development of the Immigration Acts over the last century. During the late 1800s and early 1900s, European immigrants were welcomed into Canada and offered land in exchange for their labor in the major industries such as mining, the railroads and the forestry camps and Italians were recruited by labor agents working for these industries and there were very few restrictions in order to meet demand. In 1906 and 1910, the Immigration Acts were introduced were designed to encourage British and American immigrants and restrict others, however industrialists still found that the European workers were still the best compromise in regards to wages paid and labor intensity and Italian immigration was still considerable in regards to the labor market. While little immigration occurred during the Depression and World War II years, after the war a great wave of Italian immigration occurring through a process which involved an alliance between the Canadian government and their new embassy in Rome. The process of family sponsorship created chains of Italian immigrants which was reduced when the points system was introduced in 1967 and placed a great deal of merit on education. The Immigration Act of 1976 lifted a great many of the discriminatory restrictions and allowed once more for immigration based on sponsorship and other aspects in relation to immigration goals and international relations. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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| 2. |
Arguments Opposing Illegal Immigration
(4 Pages, 47.8 USD)
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A 4 page paper opposing illegal immigration. Arguing against illegal immigration is difficult because the very stance raises the ire of well-meaning liberals and offends the sensibilities of many who are far more conservative. Further, those of us who are not of 100 percent Native American heritage are products of immigration ourselves. These difficulties do nothing to alter the facts of illegal immigration, however. Citizens and structures are not prepared for such high numbers of individuals, and the effect is that our judicial system, labor markets and social support systems are overwhelmed. The US needs to establish and enforce immigration control measures, welcoming most but maintaining control of when they arrive and how they survive once they are across the border. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
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| 3. |
Italian And Mexican Migration To The U.S.
(24 Pages, 286.8 USD)
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A 24 page paper. Following a general introduction, this essay reports the immigration patterns of first Italians and then, Mexicans. The decades of significant immigration, the reasons for Italians and Mexicans leaving their homelands, the types of jobs they took in the U.S. and the locations of most immigrants of each nationality are reported. The essay then traces immigration laws and policies from 1882, when the first immigration law was enacted. The writer then reports existing immigration policies and their effects on Italians and Mexicans. The essay ends with a conclusion that discusses three major findings in the research. Bibliography lists 16 sources.
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| 4. |
IMMIGRATION IN AUSTRALIA (1980-1990).
(15 Pages, 179.25 USD)
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This 15 page paper contrasts and compares the 1980's to the 1990's immigration patterns, motives and consequences in Australia. Issues related to immigration are discussed and the impact of increase immigration to Australia. Australia's immigration policies are discussed as well as the reaction by the world to those policies. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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| 5. |
“The California Cauldron”: A Review of the Problems Relating to Immigration Which are Facing California
(4 Pages, 47.8 USD)
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A 4 page review of William A. Clark’s “The California Cauldron”, a book which explores the impacts of recent immigration on California. Clark explores the changes in laws and other factors which have led California to become one of the most demographically evolving regions in the United States. While many of the changes which have been incurred by the state as a whole, there are adverse impacts to this high level of immigration. Californian immigration has, in fact, both social and spatial consequences. Clark investigates these impacts and asserts that if the current immigration patterns are maintained not only the state but also the nation could suffer dire consequences. No additional sources are listed.
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| 6. |
Gunther Peck's Reinventing Free Labor
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
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5 pages in length. In Gunther Peck's Reinventing Free Labor, the author makes his argument using labor and immigration historical accounts. Labor and immigration, he contends, can provide much of the very stuff of which this nation's history is built upon. By focusing on work, an endeavor that most people have to do as a means of survival, and as an act that places people into contact with each other, this provides the pictorial that is part of migration and immigration strategies. Peck provides us a glimpse into how important labor and immigration have been in U.S. history and how different scholars have approached the topic at hand. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
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| 7. |
New Urban Immigrants
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
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A 5 page analysis of the book by Illsoo Kim which looks at the ways in which immigration has changed since the Immigration Act of 1965. Kim specifically looks at the Korean community centered in the New York metropolitan area as representative of this new wave of immigration. This book demonstrates how the fundamental nature of immigration has changed since the early part of this century. No additional sources cited.
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| 8. |
Immigration : Then and Now
(8 Pages, 95.6 USD)
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This 8 page paper looks at immigration at the end of the nineteenth century and compares it with immigration at the start of the twenty-first century. How has immigration changed in the past century? Two essays are included which responds to specific questions on the topic. Bibliography lists 1 source.
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| 9. |
Immigration Questions/Who They Are
(5 Pages, 59.75 USD)
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A 5 page paper that answers 13 questions on immigration drawn from Nancy Foner's From Ellis Island to JFK, New York's Two Great Waves of Immigration (Yale University Press, 2000). The questions basically contrast immigration to New York City in 1890 with statistics from the 1990s. No additional sources cited.
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| 10. |
Immigration Questions
(6 Pages, 71.7 USD)
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A 6 page research paper that answers specific questions pertaining to American immigration. Questions cover a variety of topics, but mainly concern immigration policy in the late nineteenth/early twentieth century and public sentiment toward immigration restriction. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
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