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Unguarded Gates: A History of America's Immigration Crisis

AUTHOR: Otis L. Graham
ISBN: 0742522288

SHORT DESCRIPTION: With terrorism as a consistent threat, Americans have begun to scrutinize the effects of rising immigration and porous borders. Unguarded Gates examines America's history of immigration pressures, policy debates, and choices. In assessing the past,...

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Emigration & Immigration
         Editorial Review

Unguarded Gates: A History of America's Immigration Crisis
- Book Review,
by Otis L. Graham

Book Description
With terrorism as a consistent threat, Americans have begun to scrutinize the effects of rising immigration and porous borders. Unguarded Gates examines America's history of immigration pressures, policy debates, and choices. In assessing the past, present, and future of immigration, Graham shows that the failure to control the influx of foreigners is leading America toward further security risks, unsustainable population growth, imported workers competition with American labor, and ultimately, social fragmentation.


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         Book Review

Unguarded Gates: A History of America's Immigration Crisis
- Book Reviews,
by Otis L. Graham

Unguarded Gates: A History of America's Immigration Crisis

FROM THE PUBLISHER

Throughout America's history immigration policy has always been a controversial and complex topic, going to the heart of what it means to be American. Now, with terrorism as a new concern, Americans have begun to look closer at the effects of rising immigration and porous borders. In this tightly argued work, immigration scholar Otis L. Graham Jr. examines the history of immigration pressures and American policy debates and choices. He begins with the first "Great Wave" of the 1880s and traces the effects of the system of national origins, enforced from the 1920s through 1965. The reforms of the 1960s ushered in an era of large-scale legal and illegal immigration, resulting in a vast social experiment in demographic transformation. In assessing the past, present, and future of immigration, Graham shows that the failure to control the influx of foreigners is leading America toward further security risks, unsustainable population growth, imported worker competition with American labor, and, ultimately, social fragmentation.


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