Immigration Laws in the United States
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Transcript Immigration Laws in the United States
Immigration Laws in the
United States
A History
Alien and Sedition Act (1789)
Allowed the President to remove
any person from the U.S. that he
felt should not be allowed to stay.
Only lasted 2 years
14th Amendment
14th Amendment made African
American’s citizens.
African Americans were not
new immigrants however, this
was the first time African
Americans were granted
citizenships.
Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)
The United States used Asian
immigrants to build the railroad
system that allowed for westward
expansion.
However after the railroad was built
the U.S. no longer wanted the
immigrants.
The Exclusion act barried Chinese
immigrants from coming to the U.S.
Immigration Act of 1924
Barred entry into the U.S. for both
Chinese and Japanese immigrants.
The United States still feared
Asian immigrants and was
concerned about the Japanese
growing alliance with U.S
enemies.
National Origins Act (1924)
Established a quota system for
immigrant groups that the U.S.
deemed desirable and undesirable.
European countries were given
much larger quotas than other
countries.
American Indian Citizenship (1924)
Granted citizenships to American
Indians.
Magnuson Act (1943)
Finally gave citizenship to Asian
Americans who had been living in
the United States for over a
hundred years.
Established a quota system for
Asians immigrants.
Refugee Act of 1953
Granted entry into the U.S. for over
500,000 people who had been
displaced by war.
Immigrant Act (1965)
Repealed quota systems and
allowed immigrants from all
countries to apply for entry into the
U.S.