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Immigration and Techniques of Governance in Mexico and the United States: Recalibrating National Narratives through Comparative Immigration Histories
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 May 2011
Extract
Immigration histories typically endeavor to describe and hold a nation–state accountable not only for the laws and policies by which it admits some immigrants, but also for those by which it refuses, excludes, or deports other immigrants. This article explores immigration to Mexico and to the United States with attention to its implications for the status of persons, and also for the conventional historical narratives in each country. The article focuses on three techniques of governance that each country has engaged in regard to immigration. These techniques include: 1) the assignment of nationality as a singular attribute of personhood; 2) the use of demonstrable and documentable characteristics as criteria of admission; and 3) centralized registration procedures to monitor and control the immigrant population. The techniques are analyzed together because of their concurrent emergence in each country during the late nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The techniques are also complementary. They form a set that, although not unique to the United States and Mexico, nevertheless illustrates parallels and an interplay between the two countries, and, more broadly, illustrates how immigration presents a common predicament across different times, places, and forms of government.
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- Reflections on Further Research in Comparative Legal History
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- Copyright © the American Society for Legal History, Inc. 2011
References
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73. On June 7, 1906, Thompson wrote Mariscal again highlighting contagious diseases and how the Canadian government was helping in the cause to curb Syrian immigration. He wrote that “the Mexican government has always shown much alacrity in cooperating with the United States with respect to the suppression of common evils . . . I would be sincerely pleased to learn of their adoption, or of any other measures which Your Excellency's government may have the goodness to enact regarding the matter.” Exp. 14-28-79, June 30, 1906, Siglo XX, Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, located in Mexico City (hereafter SRE).
74. Exp. 14–28–79, July 3, 1906, Siglo XX, SRE.
75. Thompson acknowledged the proposed measures to stem Syrian immigration in a letter to Mariscal dated August 27, 1906. Through Thompson, however, the United States continued asserting pressure on Mexico regarding its immigration policy. Thompson complained in the letter of how a Syrian with trachoma, John Shahadie Jacob, “secured unlawful entry into the United States from Mexico.” He indicated that another Syrian accompanied Mr. Shahadie, but the other Syrian's whereabouts were unknown. Thompson closed the letter stating, “Should these remedial measures meet with the views of Your Excellency's government, I would be sincerely glad to learn of their adoption.” Exp. 14-28-79, August 26, 1906, Siglo XX, SRE.
76. Memorandum as to Efforts Made to Perfect an Agreement with the Railways of Mexico Concerning of Aliens, February 3, 1903, Document No. 51,463, RG 85, INS, NARA, DC, 3.
77. Acting Commissioner, Ellis Island, New York Harbor, N.Y. to United States Department of Labor, Immigration Service, January 24, 1914. Document No. 53,700-388, RG 85, INS, NARA, DC.
78. Acting Commissioner, Ellis Island, New York Harbor, N.Y. to United States Department of Labor, Immigration Service, January 24, 1914. Document No. 53,700-388, RG 85, INS, NARA, DC.
79. Immigrant Inspector Marcus Braun, Mexico City, Bureau of Immigration and Naturalization, Department of Commerce and Labor, May 7, 1907, Document No. 51,564, RG 85, INS, NARA, DC.
80. The Law of September 22, 1908 is referenced in George H. Winters, American Vice Consul United States Department of State, “Review of Mexican Department of Migration Report Entitled: ‘The Migration Service in Mexico’, and Discussing Mexican Migration To and From the United States,” Document No. 812.5511.87, M274, October 25, 1929, U.S. State Department Records, RG 84, National Archives, College Park, MD.
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86. Act of June 29, 1906, Pub. L. No. 59–338, § 8, 34 Stat. 599 (1906). See also, Daniels, Coming to America, 278.
87. Diario Oficial, No. 52, Vol. XCVII, August 29, 1927. See also Mónica Palma Mora, “‘Una inmigración bienvenida’. Los ejecutivos de empresas extranjeras en México durante la segunda mitad del siglo XX,” in Los inmigrantes en el mundo de los negocios siglos XIX y XX, coordinated by Rosa María Meyer and Delia Salazar (Mexico City: Conaculta, Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia, 2003), 237.
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100. Ibid.
101. Yankelevich and Alazraki, “La arquitectura de la política de inmigración en México,” 211–12.
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112. Letter from Earl G. Harrison, Director of Registration, INS, to Every Alien in the United States of 1940, “The National Registration of Aliens: Instructions for Registration and the Specimen Form, Form AR-1” on file with Mission Indian Agency Central Classified Files, 1920–53, NARA, LN.
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115. Alien Registration Act of 1940, Pub. L No. 76–670, 43 Stat 670 (1940); Letter from Earl Harrison (1940).
116. Act to prohibit the coming of Chinese Persons into the United States, 27 Stat. 25 (1892); Act of March 2, 1929, 45 Stat. 1512 (1929). Ngai, Impossible Subjects, 82.
117. Alien Enemy Act of 1798, 1 Stat. 577 (July 6, 1798), codified at 50 U.S.C. §§ 21–24 (2006).
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122. Ibid.
123. Hegemony can be defined as “a dominant ideology that has been naturalized and, having contrived a tangible world in its image, does not appear to be ideological at all.” Comaroff, John and Comaroff, Jean, Ethnography and the Historical Imagination (Boulder: Westview Press, 1992), 29Google Scholar.
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