Publication by 2010 DPDF Multiculturalism, Immigration, and Identity in Western Europe and the United States Research Director Nancy Foner.

Immigration has remade and changed American society since the nation’s founding, and an understanding of the past can help illuminate the immigrant experience in the present. This essay focuses on three central questions: What is new about the most recent immigrant wave? What represents continuity or parallels with the past? And how have migrant inflows in earlier historical periods changed the social, economic, political, and cultural contexts that now greet – and shape the experiences of – the latest arrivals? In examining these questions, the focus is on the last great wave of immigration at the turn of the twentieth century, in which the newcomers were mainly from Eastern, Southern, and Central Europe, and the contemporary inflow, from the late 1960s to the present, which is made up overwhelmingly of people from Latin America, Asia, and the Caribbean.

Publication Details

Title
Immigration Past & Present
Authors
Foner, Nancy
Publisher
Massachusetts Institute of Technology / MIT Press
Publish Date
July 2013
Citation
Foner, Nancy, Immigration Past & Present (Massachusetts Institute of Technology / MIT Press, July 2013).
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