Essay On Modern Immigration

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Immigration is the mobility of people from one country to another whereby they are lawfully accepted to stay permanently through a legal process set by the nation. Immigration to the United States is a multifaceted demographic sensation that has been a primary source of population growth and cultural change all through the history of the U.S.A. The United States experienced main waves of immigration throughout the colonial period in the first part of the 19th era and from the 1880s to 1920s (Bray et al., pg. 67). A great number of the immigrants came to the United States looking for a better economic opportunity whereas others such as the pilgrims came in pursuit of religious freedom. These immigrants came to the United States from areas that …show more content…

As worldwide cooperation, contacts, as well as trade, has grown in the past half of the 20th period, the movement of people has also augmented (Hayes, pg. 169). Most of the modern immigrants to the U.S are coming from Southern Asia, Latin America, Vietnam, and India. The tendency of the contemporary immigration varies from the earlier trend in various ways. First, regardless of the absolute numbers, the rate of modern immigration comparative to the total U.S population is much lower than in the earlier era. Immigration, today in the U.S, is accompanied by a much greater number of undocumented immigrants unlike before. Before the establishment, national origins quota system by the Nationality Act of 1924, immigration to the U.S was relatively open to everyone (Hayes, pg. 355). The only legal restrictions were imposed on people from Asia. Today different immigration laws have been put in place to control the entrance of immigrant into the …show more content…

Beyond being an influential demographic force accountable for how the nation as, well as its population, became what they are today, immigration has subsidized too much. It has contributed deeply towards the economic, political and social methods that are introductory to the United States as a nation. However, immigration has happened throughout American history, large-scale immigration occurred during the four peak periods. The periods include the peopling of the original colonies, the rise of cities at the turn of the 20th era, and the westward expansion during the middle of the 19th period (Wilson, n.p). These peak immigration periods have accorded with important transformations of the American economy. Several reasons impacted the immigrants from different countries moving to America. The general causes for immigration during the era from 1820 to about 1875 naturally fell into two categories. One group was that which repelled people from their mother country and the other one encompassed those that attracted them to the United States (Thomas, pg. 676). Many people found it hard to pull out of their native land and move to a strange country like America. The great immigration of people worldwide took place during the Great Depression, the hard economic times of the 1930’s. Currently, the obtainability of fast, cheap transportation, and safe transportation helps

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