The 1907 Gentlemen's Agreement - promoted by President Theodore Roosevelt - was a US immigration policy that established restrictions on Japanese labour. The policy came at a time of growing tension over Asian immigration to the west coast of the USA as well as to Canada and Mexico. The Agreement is often interpreted as an act of racial discrimination and exclusion. Undoubtedly, racial discrimination played a role in stoking and instigating American opinions over immigration in the early twentieth century. However, this article seeks to explain how the Gentlemen's Agreement was not an act of exclusion from the perspective of Theodore Roosevelt. The article contends that Roosevelt's initiative in the immigration policy was, instead, to exclu...
This article examines the determinants of Japanese immigrant economic achievement in the continental...
In the 19th century United States, westward expansion in tandem with manifest destiny increased the ...
This study examines the discrimination against Japanese immigrants in U.S. naturalization law up to ...
The 1907 Gentlemen's Agreement - promoted by President Theodore Roosevelt - was a US immigration pol...
In 1924 the Congress of the United States enacted a strict Immigration Act which limited the yearly ...
Franklin Roosevelt often receives accolades for pushing the United States towards a more liberal sta...
Many academics have been interested in the reaction of the Japanese government to immigration proble...
While the many immigrant stories associated with the American melting pot are set against the backdr...
This article focuses on the admission or exclusion of immigrants in the U.S., and documents the conc...
During the 1920s legislation was created in California that eliminated immigration from Japan. This...
Many academics have been interested in the reaction of the Japanese government to immigration proble...
This article rethinks the making of the Gentlemen’s Agreement of 1908 arguing that the agreement bet...
This article discusses the opinions published by José Martí in the Spanish-American press regarding ...
The decade after World War I has traditionally been defined as an “age of isolation.” The American p...
The Japanese immigrants who arrived in the North American West in the late nineteenth and early twen...
This article examines the determinants of Japanese immigrant economic achievement in the continental...
In the 19th century United States, westward expansion in tandem with manifest destiny increased the ...
This study examines the discrimination against Japanese immigrants in U.S. naturalization law up to ...
The 1907 Gentlemen's Agreement - promoted by President Theodore Roosevelt - was a US immigration pol...
In 1924 the Congress of the United States enacted a strict Immigration Act which limited the yearly ...
Franklin Roosevelt often receives accolades for pushing the United States towards a more liberal sta...
Many academics have been interested in the reaction of the Japanese government to immigration proble...
While the many immigrant stories associated with the American melting pot are set against the backdr...
This article focuses on the admission or exclusion of immigrants in the U.S., and documents the conc...
During the 1920s legislation was created in California that eliminated immigration from Japan. This...
Many academics have been interested in the reaction of the Japanese government to immigration proble...
This article rethinks the making of the Gentlemen’s Agreement of 1908 arguing that the agreement bet...
This article discusses the opinions published by José Martí in the Spanish-American press regarding ...
The decade after World War I has traditionally been defined as an “age of isolation.” The American p...
The Japanese immigrants who arrived in the North American West in the late nineteenth and early twen...
This article examines the determinants of Japanese immigrant economic achievement in the continental...
In the 19th century United States, westward expansion in tandem with manifest destiny increased the ...
This study examines the discrimination against Japanese immigrants in U.S. naturalization law up to ...