
Historians have long assumed that immigration to the United States was free from regulation until anti-Asian racism on the West Coast triggered the introduction of federal laws to restrict Chinese immigration in the 1880s. Studies of European immigration and government control on the East Coast have, meanwhile, focused on Ellis Island, which opened in 1892.In this groundbreaking work, Hidetaka Hirota reinterprets the origins of immigration restriction in the United States, especially deportation policy, offering the first sustained study of immigration control conducted by states prior to the introduction of federal immigration law. Faced with the influx of impoverished Irish immigrants over the first half of the nineteenth century, nativists in New York and Massachusetts built upon colonial poor laws to develop policies for prohibiting the landing of destitute foreigners and deporting those already resident to Europe, Canada, or other American states. These policies laid the foundations for federal immigration law. By investigating state officials' practices of illegal removal, including the overseas deportation of citizens, this book reveals how the state-level treatment of destitute immigrants set precedents for the use of unrestricted power against undesirable aliens. It also traces the transnational lives of the migrants from their initial departure from Ireland and passage to North America through their expulsion from the United States and postdeportation lives in Europe, showing how American deportation policy operated as part of the broader exclusion of nonproducing members from societies in the Atlantic world.By locating the roots of American immigration control in cultural prejudice against the Irish and, more essentially, economic concerns about their poverty in nineteenth-century New York and Massachusetts, Expelling the Poor fundamentally revises the history of American immigration policy.
This book investigates the origins of American immigration policy by challenging the assumption that federal regulation began only in the late nineteenth century with anti-Asian laws. Hidetaka Hirota, a historian specializing in nineteenth-century American immigration, argues that state-level authorities in New York and Massachusetts established the framework for deportation and exclusion decades earlier. By analyzing the treatment of impoverished Irish immigrants, the author demonstrates how state officials utilized colonial-era poor laws to manage and expel destitute foreigners, thereby creating the precedents that would eventually inform federal immigration control.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and scholars of American immigration policy recognize this work as a significant revisionist study that shifts the focus from federal legislation to earlier state-level practices. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the research and the author's success in connecting local economic policies to the broader development of national exclusion strategies.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2019-08-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190055561
ISBN-13:
9780190055561
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