Illegal Immigration in America
This paper looks at illegal immigration in America and discusses whether it is good or bad for the U.S. economy.
Persuasive Essay # 104400 |
2,200 words (
approx. 8.8 pages ) |
5 sources |
MLA | 2008
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Abstract
In this article, the writer notes that illegal immigration is one of the biggest controversies and highly debated issue in the United States of America. The writer maintains that the impact of illegal immigration on the U.S economy is omnipresent with the U.S economy falling while emerging economies are making significant progress. The writer notes that many economists believe that the illegal immigration into America is a kind of economic war being waged against the Americans. The law makers and the officials in the Government have taken notice of the growing impact of illegal immigrants on the U.S economy and have taken steps to amend the existing laws so as to prevent illegal immigrants from entering the United States of America. The writer discusses that apart from the economic impact, illegal immigration has brought with it other social, religious and security problems. The writer looks at the different faces of illegal immigration and its effects on Americans.
Outline:
Introduction
Illegal immigrants
Modes of Entry
Origin of Illegal Immigrants in America
Impact of Illegal Immigration
Economic Impact
Numerical Data to Support the Economic Impact
Other Faces of Illegal Immigration
Security Issues and Costs
Education and Medical Care Costs
Environment Degradation
Crimes Committed by Illegal Immigrants
Conclusion
From the Paper
"One of the most profound impacts is the decrease in the wages of low skilled workers in America. Jobs that Americans refuse to take because of lower wages are now being taken up by illegal immigrants. This has resulted in unemployment among the Americans. American companies often prefer foreign workers who work harder for a lesser pay than the American citizens. This has lead to improper distribution of income and increased the gap between the rich and poor American citizens. Another reason why the American companies prefer foreign employees is both the employer and employee can easily escape from paying taxes to the Government. The undocumented workers do not pay their taxes. In the case of American employees the taxes are deducted from their pay roll. Although illegal immigrants increase the profits for their employers they hurt the American taxpayers. Since most of the illegal immigrants have low educational qualification and low skill level they are most employed for lower wages in poor working condition mostly in underworld economies. Hence the illegal immigrants easily evade the payment of taxes without their knowledge."
Tags:immigrants, economic, impacts, burden
Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down, The (Anne Fadiman)
Analysis of 1998 book about a family of Hmong immigrants, their family history, problems & cultural & spiritual conflicts.
Analytical Essay # 10446 |
1,125 words (
approx. 4.5 pages ) |
1 source |
2001
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$ 29.95
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From the Paper
"Anne Fadiman's book The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down (Farrar, Straus and Giroux 1998) is an intelligent and moving " and unsettling story " about the costs that individuals must sometimes have to pay for living in a multicultural society and the challenges that immigrants face in the United States, even after they think that they have made it to the promised land. Fadiman also shows how the American mainstream cultural establishment " in this case represented mostly by the doctors and other medical personnel that work with one particular immigrant family " sometimes finds itself unable to help newcomers to make the leap into the often perilous new world of their dreams.
Lia Lee was born in 1981 to a family of recent Hmong immigrants to California, and soon developed symptoms of .."
Tags:BOOK, REVIEWS, NON-FICTION, IMMIGRATION
Mexican Immigration to U.S.
History, motivation, differences from other immigrants, assimilation, discrimination, language.
Analytical Essay # 11478 |
1,350 words (
approx. 5.4 pages ) |
8 sources |
1996
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$ 29.95
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From the Paper
"This paper will discuss the immigration of Mexicans to the United States. The first part of the paper will describe the history of this immigration. This will cover the period from the Mexican-American War to the present. The second part of the paper will examine the problems the immigrants faced in assimilating into American culture. This will look at the problem of discrimination and the participation of Mexican-Americans in the political process.
A History of Mexican Immigration
There is little evidence of Mexican immigration to the United States on a massive scale prior to the Twentieth Century. On the contrary, Americans migrated to Mexican lands throughout the Nineteenth Century. The Spanish had created settlements throughout..."
Tags:IMMIGRATION, MEXICO
Immigration Effect on America
A look at the impact of immigration on American society. This paper is on immigration in America.
Argumentative Essay # 2615 |
1,360 words (
approx. 5.4 pages ) |
5 sources |
2001
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$ 29.95
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Abstract
This paper is on immigration in America. The author looks at the effects of immigration on America such as the mix of race, religion and nationality and examines the possible effects of closing immigration.
From the Paper
"Without immigration the United States would not exist today. Our country was founded by immigrants, shaped by immigrants, and has been made the greatest country in the world thanks in large part to immigrants. How can we even consider closing the doors of immigration? The United States is a beautiful mosaic of races, religions, and nationalities. Immigrants have made our country unique from all others. In no other place on earth can you speak with any accent, be any color, or have any belief and know that you have the same opportunities and rights as everyone else. America has been described as a melting pot of cultures and ideas and for this we should be thankful. Immigrants have contributed so much to our country. The United States must keep its immigration doors open, and to all people."
Tags:mix, culture, religion, nationalty, ethnicity, acculturation
"The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down" by Anne Fadiman
A review of the novel highlighting the difficulties faced by Asian immigrants to America.
Analytical Essay # 9757 |
1,570 words (
approx. 6.3 pages ) |
1 source |
MLA | 2002
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$ 39.95
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Abstract
The paper asserts that the main theme of the novel is cross-cultural barriers and problems faced by immigrants in America. The paper discusses the psychological causes underlying the difficulties that immigrants, especially from Eastern countries, experience in integrating into a new society. The paper explains that while Western immigrants accept their new culture and assimilate relatively easily, Eastern immigrants resist assimilation. The paper summarizes the book and analyzes the cross-cultural miscommunication demonstrated by the family disagreeing with the established medical community as to the true nature of their child's illness and its causes.
From the Paper
""The Spirit Catches you and you fall down" is an extraordinary piece of writing in which various issues have been woven together in the style of investigative journalism by the editor of the "American Scholar", Anne Fadiman. The story revolves around issues of cross-cultural medical practices and miscommunication that often leads to tragic circumstances."
Tags:epilepsy, immigration, medicine, eastern, culture, doctor, assimilation
A discussion on whether Chinese immigrants were better placed in the Canadian or the American West between the 1850 and 1930.
Comparison Essay # 62580 |
3,326 words (
approx. 13.3 pages ) |
9 sources |
MLA | 2005
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$ 59.95
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Abstract
The focus of this paper is the pivotal period between the 1850s and the 1920s when the rates of Chinese immigration to America and Canada were at their highest. It considers which country had the more belligerent West by examining the ideas, legislation and practicalities that formed the Chinese experience in California and British Columbia between 1850 and 1930. It also examines the perception of the Chinese newcomers by Canadians and Americans, the social experiences of the Chinese in settling into their new homes and the economic experiences they had in trying to make ends meet in the face of barriers that both federal and state/provincial governments had made.
From the Paper
"Whilst historians of the American and Canadian Wests have focused their attention on the working lives of men in cities and in the mines, studies of Chinese womens' experiences have tended to be treated as a separate topic. In 1986 historian Anne Butler pointed out that women's history was lacking in an examination of the experiences of 'Oriental' women. This may be partially due to the absence of writings on Chinese women in California and British Columbia in the nineteenth century and for much of the twentieth century. Indeed, Judy Yung has commented that "life under exclusion [...has...] necessitated a pact of silence among Chinese immigrants about their past.""
Tags:california, chinatown, columbia, gold, historiography, indenture, mines, prostitution, racism, railways, riots, vancouver
A discussion on whether immigration law controls the movement of people into a state or whether it is designed to control people already in that state.
Analytical Essay # 58707 |
1,627 words (
approx. 6.5 pages ) |
10 sources |
MLA | 2005
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$ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper examines the controversial issue of immigration policy and legislation with particular focus on whether immigration law is specifically used to control external individuals from crossing borders or whether it is utilised by state sovereignty as a means of controlling individuals already within the state as well.
From the Paper
"The application of immigration law and policy within a state, especially that of a European state, is a complex issue, the ideology that the national state utilises policy and law to exert a control measure over both internal and external populations is equally just, as is the argument that it is state sovereignty that, through application of enforcement, categorises a diverse contingent of migrants into either legal or illegal immigrant groups. Again, these groups are subject to change with policy reform, and it is possible for an 'illegal' immigrant to become 'legal' with the application of policy reform. One of the primary groups vulnerable to state control through application of immigration laws and policies is that of the migrant worker."
Tags:aliens, asylum, citizenship, europe, global, illegal, travel
A study of the impact of immigration on two countries in Western Europe after the Second World War.
Analytical Essay # 51323 |
1,971 words (
approx. 7.9 pages ) |
8 sources |
MLA | 2003
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$ 39.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses how the impacts of immigration on post war western European societies were considerable and how there is still much debate as to whether or not they are beneficial. It looks at how some of the 'receiver' countries have become increasingly cosmopolitan, with a wider knowledge and acceptance of foreign cultures at a cost. In particular, it examines how immigration policies remain a problem in Britain and France and how both social tension and racism appear to have become institutionalised in their societies.
From the Paper
"Hostility and racial tension represents one of the most well documented and controversial issues concerning the impact of immigration. Western European societies were by no means unaccustomed to minority persecution, yet the discrimination against skin colour, realised in the form of the 1962 Commonwealth Immigrations Act and frequent rioting in both France and Britain, created unprecedented social tension. Some feared conflict was inevitable the moment the Empire Windrush landed at Tilbury docks from Jamaica in 1948 - the first commonwealth immigrants to settle in the country. Subsequent riots in Liverpool, Birmingham, Nottingham and Middlesbrough appeared to confirm such fears and together with the murder of Algerian immigrants in the southern France set a precedent for social unrest and racism that is still very much a part of modern European society."
Tags:britain, france, culture, racism
A look at the development of the U.K. asylum policy from its inception in 1970's to the most recent amendments in 2002, highlighting the most significant impacts on asylum seekers today.
Research Paper # 52967 |
11,371 words (
approx. 45.5 pages ) |
20 sources |
APA | 2003
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$ 99.95
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Abstract
This paper attempts to identify the shortfalls of the 2002 Act and its inability to revolutionize the asylum system in the U.K. In particular, it focuses on the adverse impact it will have on current and future asylum seekers in respect of their entitlements to welfare support and benefits. It provides a full background of the development of U.K asylum law in order to identify the route it has taken to reach its current position and investigates the reasons why the government is demonstrating a more restrictive approach to asylum policy. It then concentrates on the failings of the previous asylum policies discussed and examines why there was a significant need for reform. It critically analyzes the government's proposals for reform, identified in the White Paper "Fairer, Faster, Firmer" in 1999 and also introduces a summary of the changes implemented by the subsequent Immigration and Asylum Act 1999. The next part identifies the failings of the 1999 Act, in particular highlighting the controversial issues surrounding refugees entitlements to receive support and then introduces the proposed changes to the 1999 asylum system and present the revolutionary reforms for 2002, allowing particular consideration to the changes to the support system and the controversial issues surrounding the accommodation centre proposals.
Outline
The Background and Development of U.K .Asylum Policy
The Reform of U.K. Asylum Policy
The Failings of the 1999 Asylum System
The Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
Poverty in the Asylum Support System
Accommodation Centres
Conclusion
From the Paper
"The legislation was constructed purely from a political perspective, which provided only for interim measures such as initial arrival and detention of the asylum seeker, the appeals process, and procedures which were to follow once the asylum application had failed. Both the 1993 and 1996 Asylum Acts failed to take into account any welfare entitlements which should be made accessible to the asylum seeker, and failed to take into consideration the likelihood that the asylum seeker would be likely to remain in the UK for several months whilst his application was processed and would therefore require a significant level of social assistance. In effect the UK asylum policy did little to help the asylum seekers in need of support and protection and has endured extreme criticism. The law of asylum should function so as to ensure the fair, efficient, and effective assessment of asylum claims, instead of following a purely exclusionary regulatory strategy based on a deterrence and punishment model of asylum policy."
Tags:government, papers, poverty, white, welfare
An in-depth examination of how the concepts of race and racism affect domestic policy within Britain, especially towards immigrants.
Research Paper # 51403 |
3,307 words (
approx. 13.2 pages ) |
33 sources |
APA | 2004
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$ 59.95
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Abstract
Politics in Britain have greatly influenced the public in many ways, not least in their opinions. The following discussion looks at British immigration and asylum policies and their effect on the existence of prejudice and discrimination against minorities. It outlines the importance of the terms ?race? and ?racism? and the explanations and types that have been identified. An outline is provided of how the different types have been encompassed into immigration policies and the effect they had on popular and accepted views and what, if anything, has changed. A timeline of political events and legislation is analysed in depth to provide evidence and reasons for the existence of racism in contemporary Britain.
From the Paper
"Biologically race is a false concept, but it is real in sociological terms, in that people classify others as belonging to various races. Thus, some argue that there are no races but "social processes through which social relationships become racialised: represented ideologically as entailing race" . Thus, discrimination (i.e. political exclusion of migrants due to ?cultural incompatibility) is explained by some social scientists in terms of New Racism. It has its origins in the political crisis affecting Britain with the ascendancy of the political right in the 1980's. Its focus is ?the defence of the mythic "British/English way of life" in the face of attack from enemies outside ("Argies", "Iraqis"), and within ("black communities")? . Racism, in these terms, is defined as discrimination based on the notion that it is justifiable to demand physical separation due to different cultural ways of living. There are downfalls to this theory. Although it talks of culture, it primarily concerns itself with colour. Some argue that the notion of new racism produces blackness and Englishness as "mutually exclusive categories" . Thus the argument arises that there is nothing new about new racism and its notions are fundamentally based around that of old biological racism."
Tags:discrimination, prejudice, sociology, minority, immigration, asylum