No
God only knows.
well, social policy in Britain been shaped by one of the fallowing social groups the working class the middle class minority ethnic groups by setling the united states and never been diversed.
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U.S. policy on immigration hasn't fluctuated, the policy has been the same. To enter the United States you must fill out the proper forms, submit to a background check and follow the proper steps when you enter the United States. What has fluctuated is the enforcement of this policy. The Enforcement has been lax at times do to political pressure or economic concerns. Political pressure is placed upon the border patrol and police because the politicians are looking for votes from these ethnic groups. Economic pressure is place when the budget is cut which places less money for the border patrol which causes them to cut positions or the amount of fuel and equipment use to protect the border.
Yes, states do play a role in helping the national government in the area of immigration policy. While the federal government has the ultimate authority to create and enforce immigration laws, states can assist by cooperating with federal immigration agencies, sharing information, and implementing certain immigration policies at the state level. However, the balance of power between the federal government and states in this area can vary and has been the subject of ongoing debate.
no idea..do you have answer?
The different ethnicities in the United States all arrived through Immigration, with two exceptions. All of the Native American Tribes that exist within US territory had been there prior to European immigration and the African-Americans came through slave importation, not willing immigration.
The different ethnicities in the United States all arrived through Immigration, with two exceptions. All of the Native American Tribes that exist within US territory had been there prior to European immigration and the African-Americans came through slave importation, not willing immigration.
To this day there has always been immigration to the US
Ellis Island was the main federal Immigration station for the United States. Generally, all groups of immigrants arriving by boat would have been processed here in the 1880s.
The different ethnicities in the United States all arrived through immigration, with two exceptions. All of the Native American Tribes that exist within US territory had been there prior to European immigration and the African-Americans came through slave importation, not willing immigration.
Immigration into the United States has been shaped by legislation greatly restricting Chinese immigration through the Chinese Exclusion Acts beginning in 1882. These were a series of laws first passed in 1882 that restricted Chinese from entering the United States. They were not repealed until 1943. Until the 1880s, most immigrants to the United States were from northern and western Europe, but in the closing years of the 19th century and the opening ones of the 20th, immigration from southern and eastern Europe increased tremendously. In response, Congress in the 1920s passed legislation that restricted total immigration and favored immigration from western and northern Europe. In the 1960s, Congress removed the discriminatory national origins quota system, and legal immigration, especially from Latin America, Canada, and Asia, started to increase. By the closing years of the 20th century and the opening ones of the 21st, immigrants were primarily coming from Latin America and Asia. Illegal immigration remains a serious problem and has not been solved.