Immigration Act Of 1965 Essay

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When President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Immigration Act of 1965, also known as the Hart-Celler Act, he said, “[t]his bill that we sign today is not a revolutionary bill”, underestimating the change that would come about from the signing of this law. The Immigration Act was passed in the midst of much reform and civil rights activism in the United States and banned discrimination in the issuance of visas due to “‘race, sex, nationality, place of birth, or place of residence’”(Fitzgerald, Cook-Martin, 2015). It counteracted the immigration policy that had been in place since the 1920’s. This policy was the National Origins Act, which restricted the immigration of foreign-born people into the United States based on nationality. Most immigrants …show more content…

In Latin America, where many immigrants emigrated from after the Immigration Act of 1965, there was a lack of substantial food and medical care and many people lived in poverty. Latin American countries sought help from the United States because they found their states’ supply of money inadequate to support their people. Although Latin America had a vast amount of natural resources, they were much poorer than the more advanced industrialized countries (Smitha). Latin American countries did not have much access to visas for their citizens to the United States before the Immigration Act of 1965, so when it was passed many Latin Americans took advantage of the opportunity to travel to the United States because it would offer them what their country could not. Similarly, people fleeing the Cold War conflicts in Southeast Asia and Cubans and East Europeans traveled the United States to escape poverty and the hardships of the Communist regimes. Mexico, the Phillipines, Korea, the Dominican Republic, India, Cuba, and Vietnam were leading sources of immigrants after the passing of the act (History.com Staff,

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