YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Cuban Refugees and U S Policy on Immigration
Essays 1 - 30
have, in fact, moved far beyond the ideology we once cherished, the ideology we so identified with that it was engraved into the b...
suffering and difficulty adjusting associated with Immigration. Even the relief of being removed from whatever hardship that brou...
Convention of 1951, dealing specifically with refugees and rules for asylum. Those who flee their country of origin to escape pol...
many people arrived on American shores over the years. It is estimated that at least 400,000 people fled to the United States, and...
5,000 people a year, but it resulted in an influx of immigrants. According to Don Barnett, the annual average for refugee immigrat...
on any further immigration. If this is not implemented and adhered to, he projects the United States population will top three hu...
countries have to offer. This fear is one of the factors in the way immigration and national security are linked. Its fair to sa...
increase in immigration of roughly 120 million from 1990 (Martin and Widgren 3). The vast majority of the worlds 6.1 billion peopl...
is an asylum seeker, once the asylum is granted they become a recognised refugee. The rights of asylum seekers are severely limite...
In three pages this research paper discusses the immigration policy of the United States in a consideration of the terms economic ...
In 8 pages the Hispanic conditions as they relate to Cubans and Mexicans are considered first during the 1800s and then in terms o...
This paper examines the immigration policy of the United States in a discussion of the incident involving one of the Cuban boat pe...
additional assistance from the U.S. - after the immigrants had been sent back to Cuba. As a result, the immigrants lost, were capt...
This 15 page paper discusses U.S. immigration policies and laws in history and as they are today. The writer argues that American ...
Immigration policy has turned out to be a minefield for the political parties. This research paper examines U.S.-Mexican immigrati...
immigration rules in order to attract additional workers to contribute to the on-going economic boom in Canada for much of the 199...
people who were refugees and/or who were seeking asylum to leave an environment of persecution. On the other hand, refugees are ma...
In five pages the case of the 6 year old Cuban refugee is examined in terms of whether or not the boy should haver received politi...
In five pages this paper discusses the tensions that exist in America resulting from the Haitian refugees and Cuban Marielitos or ...
* Free market (Eating). II. HISTORY In order for the student to gain a significantly better understanding of why certain c...
fence, but rather that remedies should address both social concerns and the realities of this social, economic and political probl...
many ways (The History Learning Site, 2007). While Castro was essentially a man who sided with socialism, it was not really until ...
took on the low-wage jobs possessed by many Americans, and because such immigration seemed to threaten the United States. ...
human rights, democracy and peace is the standard," then European immigration to North America can be regarded as a blessing; how...
increases or decreases as people immigrate. They wanted to study the circumstances under which immigration benefits or harms diffe...
policies. The acronym "LPC" stands for "likely to become a public charge," and was a term applied exclusively to women who immigr...
it can be said. At first many were being detained, but the question soon became one of finding enough facilities to handle the she...
(Cragg, 2000). Implication for social work practice in working with refugees (recognised status) The granting of refugee status ...
racism to paint this ethnic group as being less than human and, therefore, worthy of exclusion from the US. 3. Why, according to ...
notions about Cuba, her grandmother and Cuban life. Lourdes has to cope with Pilars attitude, such as when she mocks her adopted c...