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In: International labour review, Band 47, S. 85
ISSN: 0020-7780
In: International labour review, Band 48, S. 651-652
ISSN: 0020-7780
Most Japanese correspondence is from Minister for Foreign Affairs. ; Cover title. ; [pt. 1] Correspondence from 1892 to January 29, 1908, comprising the views interchanged between the Government of the United States and the Government of Japan; and also various assurances given by the Imperial Japanese Government.--pt. 2. [Further views exchanged between the United States and Japan. Correspondence between the Department of State and other branches of government] ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015019100083
Most Japanese correspondence is from Minister for Foreign Affairs. ; Foreword to pt. 2 signed: Department of State, Division of Far Eastern Affairs, June 3, 1909. ; At head of title: Confidential. ; Cover title. ; [pt. 1] Correspondence from 1892 to January 29, 1908, comprising the views interchanged between the Government of the United States and the Government of Japan; and also various assurances given by the Imperial Japanese Government.--pt. 2. [Further views exchanged between the United States and Japan. Correspondence between the Department of State and other branches of government] ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: Political science quarterly: a nonpartisan journal devoted to the study and analysis of government, politics and international affairs ; PSQ, Band 2, Heft 3, S. 520
ISSN: 1538-165X
In: NOMOS - American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy
In: NOMOS - American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy Ser. v.15
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Preface -- Contributors -- Part I. Why Do States Have the Right to Control Immigration? -- 1. Why Does the State Have the Right to Control Immigration? -- 2. Three Mistakes in Open Borders Debates -- 3. Jurisdiction and Exclusion: A Response to Sarah Song -- Part II. Law's Migrations, Mobilities, and Borders -- 4. Bordering by Law: The Migration of Law, Crimes, Sovereignty, and the Mail -- 5. Citizens and Persons -- 6. Commentary on "Bordering by Law" by Judith Resnik -- Part III. Immigration and Legitimate International Institutions
In: Program in Migration and Refugee Studies
A small but growing number of immigrants today are moving into new settlement areas, such as Winchester, Va., Greensboro, N.C., and Salt Lake City, Utah, that lack a tradition of accepting newcomers. Just as the process is difficult and distressing for the immigrants, it is likewise a significant cause of stress for the regions in which they settle. Long homogeneous communities experience overnight changes in their populations and in the demands placed on schools, housing, law enforcement, social services, and other aspects of infrastructure. Institutions have not been well prepared to cope. L
This book renders a comprehensive and detailed analysis of the socioeconomic and demographic outcomes of Puerto Ricans during Puerto Rico's severe economic crisis. This book is a valuable resource for scholars interested in Puerto Rico and economic, social mobility, migration, demographic, or public policy issues for Hispanics and Latinos.
In: The Italian American experience
Intro -- Contents -- About the Authors -- Acknowledgments -- Part 1. Historical Background, Theoretical Framework, and Sociodemographic Context -- 1. Introduction: Immigration and the Color Line in America -- 2. Theoretical Perspetives on Color Lines in the United States -- 3. What Is This Person's Race? The Census and the Construction of Racial Categories -- 4. Immigration and the Geography of the New Ethnoracial Diversity, with James D. Bachmeier and Zoya Gubernskaya -- Part 2. Individual Experiences of Diversity: From Multieraciality to Multiracial Identification -- 5. The Cultural Boundaries of Ethnoracial Status and Intermarriage -- 6. What About the Children? Interracial Families and Ethnoracial Identification -- 7. Who Is Multiracial? The Cultural Reproduction of the One-Drop Rule -- 8. From Racial to Ethnic Status: Claiming Ethnicity Through Culture -- Part 3. the Empirical and Policy Significance of Diversity: Generalization and Paradox -- 9. Ethnoracial Diversity, Minority-Group Threat, and Boundary Dissolution: Clarifying the Diversity Paradox, with James D. Bachmeier -- 10. Conclusion: The Diversity Paradox and Beyond (Plus Ca Change, Plus C'est la Meme Chose) -- Appendix: Methodological Appendix -- Notes -- References -- Index.
In: The American immigration collection. Series II
Half Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- INTRODUCTION Immigration has never been about immigration -- ISLAND Ellis Island and the inventions of race and disability -- PIER Canada's Pier 21 and the memorialization of immigration -- EXPLOSION Technologies of immigration restriction -- ARCHIVE Affective spaces of eugenics -- CONCLUSION Responsibility for tomorrow -- Bibliography -- Index
In: Central European history, Band 13, Heft 4, S. 348-377
ISSN: 1569-1616
Upto the end of the nineteenth century Germany was a country of emigrants. Until recently the nineteenth- and early twentieth-century transatlantic migration of more than five million Germans, mostly to North America, has been largely forgotten in contemporary Germany, except by a few historians. That is all the more true for the mass movement of foreign migrant workers into the German labor market in the decades preceding World War I. Of immediate interest in West Germany today is the so-called "guest-worker question" (Gastarbeiterfrage) which is now becoming an immigration issue in contrast to the earlier "foreign-worker question" in pre-World War I Germany. In recent years West Germany witnessed the transition from a country hiring "guest workers" to one possessing a genuine immigrant minority. This ongoing experience has contributed to a new interest in the historical development of transnational migration in both of its manifestations, as emigration and as immigration. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries Germany experienced alternating waves of the two forms of transnational mass migration, both of which were dwarfed by the internal migration streams.