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  5. The Immigration Act of 1990: Retreat from Reform

The Immigration Act of 1990: Retreat from Reform

File(s)
Briggs47_Immigration_Act.pdf (4.98 MB)
Permanent Link(s)
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/75019
Collections
Faculty Publications - Human Resource Studies
ILR Articles and Chapters
Author
Briggs, Vernon M. Jr
Abstract

[Excerpt] It is difficult to understand why anyone would editorially "rejoice", as has been done, over the immigration legislation passed by Congress on the last day of the 101st Congressional session. The new statute, which was signed into law by President George Bush on November 29, 1990, is ill conceived, deceptively designed, poorly timed, and subtly racist. Despite the chronic need for reform, the Immigration Act of 1990 cannot possibly be described as being in the national interest. It perpetuates and expands the worst features of the existing system while introducing new features that are both counterproductive and, in parts, unethical in the principles it projects.

Date Issued
1991-10-01
Keywords
immigration
•
public policy
•
illegal immigration
•
Immigration Act of 1990
•
labor market
•
labor supply
Related DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01256573
Rights
Required Publisher Statement: Copyright by the Human Sciences Press. Final article published as Briggs, V. M., Jr. (1991). The Immigration Act of 1990: Retreat from reform. Population & Environment, 13(1), 89-93.
Type
article

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