PLS 392 Lecture 1: PLS392 Notes 1

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8 Mar 2017
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Size of i(cid:373)(cid:373)igratio(cid:374) flows does(cid:374)"t (cid:272)orrelate with pu(cid:271)li(cid:272) opi(cid:374)io(cid:374); per(cid:272)e(cid:374)t of foreig(cid:374)-born doesn"t affect. It"s striking that there has been an liberalization given public support: public opinion in favor of immigration is higher now than at previous eras, but no bursts of reform on the horizon. So it does(cid:374)"t really affe(cid:272)t regi(cid:373)es. is because immigrants are common scapegoats: ex. Chinese exclusion act of 1882: but there are many times where restrictive policies were enacted in good economic times: Immigration and naturalization act of 1952: most evidence is contradictory: the only amnesty program was passed at the time of historically highest unemployment. Not broad immigration reform was passed after the most recent recessions. Institutions through history: president opposed chinese exclusion act, support overwhelmed, literacy tests: some opposed, some supported. Final possibility: political coalition: historically immigration hasn"t been as partisan as one would expect, ex. Immigration admissions/control: how many immigrants, what type of immigrants, etc.

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