Asian Americans and Congress: A Documentary History
By (Author) Robert H. Hyung Chan Kim
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
16th February 1996
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Civics and citizenship
Social law and Medical law
Citizenship and nationality law
Social and cultural history
Jurisprudence and general issues
325.2500973
Hardback
608
With California's passage of the Save Our State Initiative in 1994, fear of aliens has once again appeared in U.S. legislative history. Since 1790, congressional legislation on federal immigration and naturalization policy has been harsh on Asian immigrants, although less so since 1965. This documentary history covers all major immigration laws passed by Congress since 1790. The volume opens with an overview of the basis on which Congress has restricted Asian immigration. It then includes discussions of particular immigration legislation, showing the significance to Asian Americans and the documents themselves. With California's passage of the Save Our State Initiative in November 1994, fear of aliens has once again appeared in U.S. legislative history. Since 1790, congressional legislation establishing federal immigration and naturalization policy has been particularly harsh on Asian immigrants. Although Congress has been less hostile to Asian immigration since 1965, there was a renewed effort to limit immigration from Asia as recently as 1989, and the restrictive national mood will undoubtedly find its way into the 1996 elections. Showing the impact of immigration laws on Asian immigrants, this documentary history covers all major immigration laws passed by Congress since 1790. The volume's opening chapter points to three major thesesthat initially Congress restricted and excluded Asian immigration on the basis of its traditional policy of denying citizenship to nonwhite people, that Congress denied Asians entry to the U.S. on the grounds that their culture made them incompatible with Americans, and that Congress passed laws treating each of the Asian ethnic groups as a racialized ethnic group. The volume then includes discussions of particular immigration legislation, showing the significance to Asian Americans and the documents themselves.
HYUNG-CHAN KIM is Professor of Education and Asian American Studies at Western Washington University. A founding member of the Association of Asian American Studies, he is the author of several books, including most recently A Legal History of Asian Americans (Greenwood, 1994). He is currently working on a biographical dictionary of notable Asian Americans, forthcoming from Greenwood.