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Free to Move? The Law and Politics of Internal Migration in Twentieth-Century America.

机译:自由移动?二十世纪美国内部移民的法律和政治。

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摘要

The history of the United States in the mid-twentieth century is, in significant measure, a history of internal migration. Between 1930 and 1970, as national quota laws kept the nation's foreign-born population at record low levels, the attention of journalists, lawmakers, jurists, social workers, civil rights activists, and the broader public turned to internal migration. The rapid pace of urbanization and the industrialization of agriculture made internal migration a pressing national question and a flashpoint in American politics. Migration was implicated in many of the seminal events of the era: from the Dust Bowl Migration to the Second Great Migration, the New Deal to the Great Society, the Bonus Army to the Watts Riots.;Historians have largely overlooked this period of intense interest in internal migration and they have entirely neglected its significance. This dissertation offers the first historical appraisal of the law and politics of internal migration in the mid-twentieth century. Drawing on a broad source base—including federal and state court casefiles, the records of Congress and presidential administrations, personal and organizational papers, and contemporary published accounts—it explains how the debates over migration took shape and what their long-term effects were for policy and polity. During this period, a community of migrant advocates recommended fundamental reforms to social welfare and labor market policies. These social workers, legislators, public welfare officials, social scientists, and lawyers often faced indifference and resistance from lawmakers and the general public. They were not able to accomplish all that they hoped. But they convinced Congress and the Supreme Court to reform central pillars of the welfare state and redefine citizenship. At the beginning of the period, migrants, like all Americans, were defined by law and custom as local citizens, and local laws determined whether they could receive benefits or even move from one place to the next. By the end of the period, migrant advocates had convinced policymakers that the federal government bore some responsibility for migrants and that migrants, as national citizens, were entitled to the same rights and privileges as long-time residents. The contemporary welfare state and conception of national citizenship emerged out of these debates over internal migration.
机译:在很大程度上,美国在20世纪中叶的历史是国内移民的历史。在1930年至1970年之间,由于国家配额法使该国的外国出生人口处于创纪录的低水平,记者,议员,法学家,社会工作者,民权活动家以及广大公众的注意力都转向了内部移民。城市化的快速发展和农业的工业化使内部移民成为一个迫切的全国性问题,也是美国政治上的一个热点。移民牵涉到该时代的许多重大事件:从沙尘暴移民到第二次大移民,从新政到大社会,从红军到瓦茨暴动。历史学家在很大程度上忽略了这一时期的浓厚兴趣在内部移民中,他们完全忽略了它的重要性。本文对二十世纪中叶的国内移民法律和政治进行了首次历史性的评价。借助广泛的资源基础,包括联邦和州法院的案卷,国会和总统行政当局的记录,个人和组织文件以及当代出版的账目,它解释了关于移民问题的辩论是如何形成的以及它们的长期影响是什么政策和政体。在此期间,一个移民倡导者社区建议对社会福利和劳动力市场政策进行根本性改革。这些社会工作者,立法者,公共福利官员,社会科学家和律师经常面临立法者和公众的冷漠和抵制。他们无法实现他们希望的一切。但是他们说服国会和最高法院改革福利国家的主要支柱并重新定义公民身份。在这一时期的开始,移民和所有美国人一样,都按照法律和习惯被定义为当地公民,而当地法律则决定了他们是否可以领取救济金,甚至可以从一个地方转移到另一个地方。到这一时期结束时,移民倡导者已经说服政策制定者,联邦政府对移民负有一些责任,移民作为国民,享有与长期居民相同的权利和特权。这些关于内部移民的辩论产生了当代的福利国家和国家公民概念。

著录项

  • 作者单位

    Harvard University.;

  • 授予单位 Harvard University.;
  • 学科 History United States.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 532 p.
  • 总页数 532
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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