[On February
5, 1917 Congress passed the influential and exclusionary Immigration
Act of 1917. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that Act and other stages
across the history
of immigration laws, leading up to a weekend post on where our laws and
narratives stand in 2020.]
On why the
landmark 1965 law was truly groundbreaking, and two ways to complicate that
narrative.
If this week’s series
thus far has done what I hoped it would, it has (among both more specific topics
for each post and other continuing threads and themes of course) convinced you
of the historical truth I articulated most overtly at the end of yesterday’s
post: that for much of American history, the creation and development of
immigration laws served not just to discriminate against particular communities
of arrivals, but also and often especially to embody an exclusionary attitude
toward American communities already here. With that longstanding history in
mind, it’s difficult to overstate just how much the Immigration
and Nationality Act of 1965 (also known as the Hart-Celler Act) represented
a
break from that legacy, a law intended to make it both possible and easier
for many groups (including the Asian
immigrants who had been so fully excluded for nearly a century) to come to
the United States. For that reason, I think it’s entirely fair and accurate to
see the law as a third component to the prominent Great
Society laws (the 1964 Civil Rights Act and 1965 Voting Rights Act) through
which President Lyndon Johnson and his Democratic and progressive allies helped
move America significantly further toward equality and justice.
That’s a central
aspect of the 1965 Act, and one that again is difficult to overstate. Yet
history is multi-layered (that could probably be a motto for this blog!), and
any narrative of historical events that emphasizes only one element or meaning
is likely limited at best. One way to complicate our narratives of the 1965 Act
is to note that, while it importantly did away with quotas based on national/ethnic
origins, it also created a system of preferences that was in its own way quite
hierarchical as well. One such preference, for
family reunification, was entirely understandable and difficult to critique
(although the Trump administration has tried to through its propagandistic attacks
on “chain migration”). But the 1965 law also created a number of other
preferences, from the economic (the “million
dollar visa” category about which I wrote earlier in the week) to the
educational (prioritizing immigrants with particular levels of and degrees in higher
education). Each of those preferences and categories can certainly be supported
(although I find the “million dollar visa” quite disturbing, to be honest), but
at the very least they make clear that even after the 1965 Act, US immigration policy
continued to define certain immigrant communities as more desirable than others
(and, more troublingly, vice versa).
The other way to
complicate narratives of the 1965 Act as representing a significant shift in
favor of American diversity is one for which I’ve been arguing since my Chinese Exclusion Act book. The simple
fact is that nearly all of the national and ethnic categories that benefitted
from the 1965 law had already been part of the US, in many cases for centuries—I
made that case at least for Asian American communities in that book, and do so
for Muslim American communities (another group frequently associated with
post-1965 immigration) in a chapter of my
most recent book. While certainly post-1965 America has seen increasing
diversity (both in terms of the number of distinct nations represented and the
number of Americans from those nations), it’s quite different (and to my mind
far more accurate) to describe that trend as a return to and amplification of longstanding,
foundational diversity, rather than something new. After all, to describe this
post-1965 diversity as new (even if one is doing so in order to celebrate it)
is not just inaccurate (although, again, I believe that it is); it also makes
it far easier for critics
of this trend to argue that it represents a change in American identity, a
change that exclusionary voices seek to define as threatening and destructive.
Instead, it’s far more accurate to say that the 1965 Act represented a change
in American immigration law, one that allowed such laws for the first time to
amplify rather than seek to limit our foundational diversity.
Special post
this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think?
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