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kicyunya [14]
3 years ago
9

(ECONOMICS)

History
1 answer:
pentagon [3]3 years ago
5 0
I think the answer is diminishing marginal utility
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Discuss the United States immigration policy over the past 200 years
Masteriza [31]

Answer:

Conventional histories of U.S. immigration policy generally present the starting point as laissez-faire, or open door, an attitude that only shifted to favor increased restriction after the Civil War. The door began to close with the exclusion of Chinese in the final decades of the 19th century and the imposition of annual quotas for Europeans in the 1920s.

While this timeline indeed highlights important aspects of U.S. immigration policy, it distorts the larger reality. As its title suggests, my book A Nation by Design argues instead that from colonial times onward, Americans actively devised policies and laws that effectively shaped the country's population and hence its overall makeup. In this perspective, the United States is distinct from other overseas nations of European origin where immigration remained largely governed by the imperial governments or, in the case of the precociously independent South American states, hardly governed at all.

Since before the Revolutionary War, in which the country successfully gained its independence from England, Americans not only set conditions for membership but decided quite literally who would inhabit the land. They drove out and ultimately eradicated most of the original dwellers. They actively recruited those considered most suitable, kept out undesirables, stimulated new immigration flows from untapped sources, imported labor, and even undertook the removal of some deemed ineligible for membership.

On the positive side, American policy initially extended well beyond laissez-faire to proactive acquisition, reflected in multiple initiatives to obtain immigrants from continental Europe by insisting on their freedom of exit at a time when population was still regarded as a scarce, valuable resource preciously guarded by territorial rulers.

Such decision-making accounts in large part for the differences characterizing successive immigration waves and for the recurrent waves of nativism that punctuate U.S. immigration history. It also illustrates the persistence of identity-related and economic concerns.

From the economic perspective, immigration is viewed essentially as a source of additional labor, which reduces its price, or at least prevents it from rising; in the case of the highly skilled, it also externalizes the costs of training. Therefore, business interests have been generally supportive of immigration. By the same token, from its inception, organized labor has tended to view immigration as a threat (although unions began to embrace immigrants in the 1970s).

Most labor migration brings in people who differ culturally from the bulk of the established population, as signified by language, religion, and ethnicity, often manifested in phenotypical characteristics. Hence, the tapping of new sources of immigration frequently triggers confrontations in what are now termed "culture wars" between those intent upon preserving the nation's established boundaries of identity and those more tolerant of their broadening, who include the new immigrants themselves and their descendants.

The intersection of these identity and economic concerns explains why, throughout its history, immigration policy in the United States has recurrently opened the door to migrants from one part of the world while shutting the door for migrants from somewhere else. "Strange bedfellow" political dynamics, with alliances straddling the usual "liberal/conservative" divide, have also resulted from identity and economic concerns.

Policies, labor-recruitment strategies, and popular sentiment from various time periods in U.S. history reflect the tensions and unexpected political alliances. This article will highlight only some of those policies and strategies

Explanation:

3 0
2 years ago
What allowed the people of Ghana to cross the Sahara in order to trade with others?
Masja [62]
Honestly, it was the camel. Also, going up the Nile helped even better.
8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Menu.
Brut [27]

Answer:

The Louisiana Purchase was controversial because  MANY PEOPLE THOUGHT THAT PRESIDENT JEFFERSON DIDN'T HAVE THE CONSTITUTIONAL POWER TO DO SO.

However, it was the foundation for the westward expansion of the United States. The purchase doubled the size of the country and  ensured THAT FRANCE WOULD NO LONGER BE A COLONIAL POWER IN NORTH AMERICA.

Explanation:

Louisiana a region of the French colony of New France that was established in 1682, that went from the Great Lakes to the Gulf of Mexico, between the Rockies and the Mississippi River.

This area was exploited from the French colony of Saint Domingue, today Haiti. That is why, when it became clear that the Haitian Revolution implied the independence of that country, the French government of Napoleon decided to sell Louisiana, since it could not defend it and to raise money to finance its wars in Europe.

Although the opposition to President Jefferson opposed the purchase, it was finally carried out, expanding the territory of the United States to almost double what it had prior to the purchase.

6 0
2 years ago
What is peasent revolts​
lisov135 [29]

Answer:

Also names the Great Rising

Explanation:

It was a major uprising across large parts of England in 1381. The rebels sought a reduction in taxation, an end to the system of unfree labour known as sefdom, and the removal of the kings senior officials and law courts

5 0
3 years ago
Which of the following Native American cultures built connected stone homes?
suter [353]

The Native American culture that built connected stone homes was

B. The Ancestral Puebloans.

Ancestral Puebloans in the American Southwest, were one of the four major prehistoric archaeological traditions in this region. The Ancestral Puebloans are best known for stone and earth dwellings,  although the first ancestral pueblo homes were based on traditional pit houses.  They built apartment like structures which were made of diverse materials like mud and stone, or were carved into the sides of the canyon walls.    

The area in which these constructions appeared is referred to as: Oasisamerica a word which defines pre-Columbian southwestern North America.  The culture has its center in the Colorado Plateau, it extends from central New Mexico to southern Nevada.  

The word "pueblo" in Spanish means town or village.  The first Spanish explorers, saw the ancient dwellings and named them "pueblo".  The Navajo people who now live in part of this territory referred to its ancient inhabitants as Anaasazi which means: ancestors of our enemies.  Other cultures had other names to describe this ancient civilization.    


4 0
2 years ago
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