Changes

Jump to: navigation, search
no edit summary
<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHfhiBHnk9A</youtube>
 
 
__NOTOC__
In 1943, Congress passed a measure to repeal the discriminatory exclusion laws against Chinese immigrants and establish an immigration quota for China of around 105 visas per year. As such, the Chinese were both the first to be excluded at the beginning of the era of immigration restriction and the first Asians to gain entry to the United States in liberalization.
The repeal of Chinese exclusion paved the way for measures in 1946 to admit Filipino and Asian-Indian immigrants. The exclusion of both of these groups had long damaged U.S. relations with the Philippines and India. Eventually, Asian exclusion ended with the 1952 Immigration Act, although that Act followed the Chinese quota pattern and assigned racial, not national, quotas to all Asian immigrants. This system did not end until Congress did away with the National Origins quota system altogether in the Immigration Act of 1965.
<youtube>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fHfhiBHnk9A</youtube>
* Republished from [https://history.state.gov/| Office of the Historian, United States Department of State]

Navigation menu