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Immigration to Argentina

Immigration to Argentina began in several millennia BCE with the arrival of different populations from Asia to the Americas through Beringia, according to the most accepted theories, and were slowly populating the Americas. Upon arrival of the Spaniards, the native inhabitants of Argentine territory were approximately 300,000[1] people belonging to many Indigenous American civilizations, cultures, and tribes.

Immigration to Argentina, late 19th century
Immigrants' Hotel, Buenos Aires. Built in 1906, it could accommodate up to 4,000.

The history of immigration to Argentina can be divided into several major stages:

  • Spanish colonization between the 16th and 18th century, mostly male,[2] largely assimilated with the natives through a process called miscegenation. Although, not all of the current territory was effectively colonized by the Spaniards. The Chaco region, Eastern Patagonia, the current province of La Pampa, the south zone of Córdoba, and the major part of the current provinces of Buenos Aires, San Luis, and Mendoza were maintained under indigenous dominance—Guaycurúes and Wichís from the Chaco region; Huarpes in the Cuyana and north Neuquino; Ranqueles in the east of Cuyo and north from the Pampean region; Tehuelches and Mapuches in the Pampean and Patagonian regions, and Selknam and Yámanas in de Tierra del Fuego archipelago—which were taken over by the Mapuches; first to the east of Cordillera de los Andes, mixing interracially with the Pehuenches in the middle of the 18th century and continuing until 1830 with the indigenous Pampas and north from Patagonia, which were conquered by the Argentine State after its independence.
  • The African population, forcibly introduced from sub-Saharan Africa (mainly of Bantu origin), taken to work as slaves in the colony between the 17th and 19th centuries in great numbers.
  • Immigration mostly European and to a lesser extent from Western Asia, including considerable Arab and Jewish currents, produced between the end of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century (particularly Italians[3] and Spaniards in that quantitative order), promoted by the Constitution of 1852 that prohibited establishing limitations to enter the country to those “strangers that bring through the purpose of working the land, bettering the industries, and introducing and teaching the sciences and the arts”[4]  and order the State to promote “European” immigration, even though after predomination of Mediterranean immigrants, from Eastern Europe and the western Asia. Added to this is the Alberdian precept of “to govern is to populate.” These politics were destined to generate a rural social fabric and to finalize the occupation of the Pampean, Patagonian, and Chaco territories, that until the 1880s, were inhabited by diverse indigenous cultures.[5]
  • European immigration in the 19th century and early 20th century (mainly Italian and Spanish), focused on colonization and sponsored by the government (sometimes on lands conquered from the native inhabitants by the Conquest of the Desert in the last quarter of the century).[6]
  • The immigration from nearby countries (Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, Bolivia, and Paraguay) from the 19th to 21st century. These immigration streams date back to the first agro-pottery civilizations that appeared in Argentine territory.[7][8]
  • From the 1980s and 1990s, the migration currents especially come from Chile, Paraguay, Bolivia, Peru, Asia (particularly from Korea, China, and Japan in this period) and Eastern Europe.
  • During the 21st century, a part of Argentine migrants and their descendants returned from Europe and the United States. In addition, immigrants from Bolivia, Paraguay, and Peru; now there are also migratory streams from China, Brazil,[9][10]Colombia, Cuba, Venezuela, Senegal, Ecuador, Dominican Republic, and Haiti.
  • Mostly urban immigration during the era of rapid growth in the late 19th century (from 1880 onwards) and the first half of the 20th century, before and after World War I and also after the Spanish Civil War.[11]

History edit

Colonial era edit

The Spanish migration flows which conquered and colonised the area that is now Argentina were mainly three:

The Spanish conquistadores and settlers were mainly from Biscay, as well from Galicia and Portugal, founding cities and establishing estancias for supplies of agricultural and livestock products. The scale of operations was reduced, mainly focused on the domestic market and the provision of the crown.

Support and control of immigration edit

 
Copy of a colonization contract in the history museum of San José, Entre Ríos

Since its unification as a country, Argentine rulers intended the country to welcome immigration. Article 25 of the 1853 Constitution reads:

The Federal Government will encourage European immigration, and it will not restrict, limit or burden with any taxes the entrance into Argentine territory of foreigners who come with the goal of working the land, improving the industries and teach the sciences and the arts.

The Preamble of the Constitution dictates a number of goals (justice, peace, defence, welfare and liberty) that apply "to all men in the world who wish to dwell on Argentine soil". The Constitution incorporates, along with other influences, the thought of Juan Bautista Alberdi, who expressed his opinion on the matter in succinct terms: "to govern is to populate".

As a result of policies promoting immigration to the once sparsely populated country 11% of the Argentinian population and 50% of the population of Buenos Aires was made up of newly arrived immigrants by 1869.[12]

The legal and organisational precedents of today's National Directorate for Migration (DNM) can be found in 1825, when Rivadavia created an Immigration Commission. After the commission was dissolved, the government of Rosas continued to allow immigration. Urquiza, under whose sponsorship the Constitution was drawn, encouraged the establishment of agricultural colonies in the Littoral (western Mesopotamia and north-eastern Pampas).

The first law dealing with immigration policies was Law 817 of Immigration and Colonization, of 1876. The General Immigration Office was created in 1898, together with the Hotel de Inmigrantes (Immigrants' Hotel), in Buenos Aires.

The liberal rulers of the late 19th century saw immigration as the possibility of bringing people from supposedly more civilised, enlightened countries into a sparsely populated land, thus diminishing the influence of aboriginal elements and turning Argentina into a modern society with a dynamic economy. These politicians and intellectuals favored northern European immigration in particular.[13] However, immigrants did not bring only their knowledge and skills.

In 1902, a Law of Residence (Ley de Residencia) was passed, mandating the expulsion of foreigners who "compromise national security or disturb public order", and, in 1910, a Law of Social Defence (Ley de Defensa Social) explicitly named ideologies deemed to have such effects. These laws were a reaction by the ruling elite against imported ideas such as labor unionism, anarchism and other forms of popular organisation.

The modern National Directorate for Migration was created by decree on 4 February 1949, under the Technical Secretariat of the Presidency, in order to deal with the new post-war immigration scenario. New regulations were added to the Directorate by Law 22439 of 1981 and a decree of 1994, but the current regulations are the Law 25871 of 2004 and the decree 616 of 2010.[14][15]

Features of immigration edit

 
European-born Argentines by provinces and territories (1914 Argentine Census).
A large immigration was experienced all over the country (except for the Northwest), which consisted overwhelmingly by Europeans in a 9/10 ratio. However, Neuquén and Corrientes had a small European population but a large South American immigration (particularly the former), mainly from Chile and Brazil, respectively. The Chaco region (North) had a moderate influx from Bolivia and Paraguay as well.

The majority of immigrants, since the 19th century, have come from Europe, mostly from Italy and Spain. Also notable were Jewish immigrants escaping persecution, giving Argentina the highest Jewish population in Latin America, and the 7th in all the world. The total population of Argentina rose from 4 million in 1895 to 7.9 million in 1914, and to 15.8 million in 1947; during this time the country was settled by 1.5 million Spaniards and 3.8 million Italians between 1861 and 1920[16] but not all remained. Also arrived were Poles, Russians, French (more than 100,000 each), Germans and Austrians (also more than 100,000), Portuguese, Greeks, Ukrainians, Croats, Czechs, Irish, British, Swiss, Dutch, Hungarians, Scandinavians (the vast majority being Danes ), and people from other European and Middle Eastern countries, prominently Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Armenia, and Turkey. These trends made Argentina the country with the second-largest number of immigrants, with 6.6 million, second only to the United States with 27 million. In addition, Argentine immigrant documents also show immigrants from Australia, South Africa and The United States arriving in Argentina.[17][18][clarification needed]

Most immigrants arrived through the port of Buenos Aires and stayed in the capital or within Buenos Aires Province, as it still happens today. In 1895, immigrants accounted for 52% of the population in the Capital, and 31% in the province of Buenos Aires (some provinces of the littoral, such as Santa Fe, had about 40%, and the Patagonian provinces about 50%). In 1914, before World War I caused many European immigrants to return to their homeland in order to join the respective armies, the overall rate of foreign-born population reached its peak, almost 30%.

A significant number of immigrants settled in the countryside in the interior of the country, especially the littoral provinces, creating agricultural colonies. These included many Jews, fleeing pogroms in Europe and sponsored by Maurice de Hirsch's Jewish Colonization Association; they were later termed "Jewish gauchos". The first such Jewish colony was Moïseville (now the village of Moisés Ville). Through most of the 20th century, Argentina held one of the largest Jewish communities (near 500,000) after the US, France, Israel and Russia, and by far the largest in Latin America (see History of the Jews in Argentina). Argentina is home to a large community from the Arab world, made up mostly of immigrants from Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Armenia, and Turkey. Most are Christians of the Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic (Maronite) Churches, with small Muslim and Jewish minorities. Many have gained prominent status in national business and politics, including former president Carlos Menem, the son of Syrian settlers from the province of La Rioja. (see Arab Argentine).

The Welsh settlement of Argentina, whilst not as large as those from other countries, was nevertheless one of the largest in the planet and had an important cultural influence on the Patagonian Chubut Province. Other nationalities have also settled in particular areas of the country, such as Irish in Formosa and the Mesopotamia region, the Ukrainians in Misiones where they constitute approximately 9% of the population.[19]

Well-known and culturally strong are the German-speaking communities such as those of German-descendants themselves (both those from Germany itself, and those ethnic Germans from other parts of Europe, such as Volga Germans), Austrian, and Swiss ones. Strong German-descendant populations can be found in the Mesopotamia region (especially Entre Ríos and Misiones provinces), many neighborhoods in Buenos Aires city (such as Belgrano or Palermo), the Buenos Aires Province itself (strong German settlement in Coronel Suárez, Tornquist and other areas), Córdoba (the Oktoberfest celebration in Villa General Belgrano is specially famous) and all along the Patagonian region, including important cities such as San Carlos de Bariloche (an important tourist spot near the Andes mountain chain, which was especially influenced by German settlements).

The South African Boers Patagonia houses a unique community of South African Boers who settled there after the Second Boer War against the United Kingdom, which ended in 1902. Between 1903 and 1909, up to 800 Boer families trekked by ship to this lonely spot on Argentina's east coast, about 1500 km north of Tierra del Fuego. There are an estimated 100–120 Boer families still living on the land assigned to them by General Julio Roca. They are mainly an agricultural community.[20][21][22][23]

Other nationalities, such as Spaniards, although they have specific localities (such as the centre of Buenos Aires), they are more uniformly present all around the country and form the general background of Argentine population today.

European immigration to Argentina (1870–1914)[24]
Origin Period
1857–1859 1860–1869 1870–1879 1880–1889 1890–1899 1900–1909 1910–1919 1920–1929 1930–1931 1940–1949 1950–1959
Belgium 68 518 628 15,096 2,694 2,931 2,193
Switzerland 219 1,562 6,203 11,569 4,875 4,793 4,578
Denmark 303 1,128 1,282 3,437 4,576
France 720 6,360 32,938 79,422 41,048 37,340 25,258
Germany 178 1,212 3,522 12,958 9,204 20,064 22,148 60,130 1 66,327
Italy[clarification needed] 9,006

3,979

5,027

93,602

51,695

41,997

156,716

110,994

45,722

472,179

98,655

373,524

411,764

374,745

37,019

848,533

318,841

529,692

712,310

459,930

252,380

Netherlands 37 111 111 4,315 675 1,622 1,264
Spain 2,440 20,602 44,802 148,398 114,731 672,941 598,098
Sweden 186 632 490 592 508 441
United Kingdom 359 2,708 9,265 15,692 4,691 13,186 13,560
Russia 80 407 464 4,155 15,665 73,845 48,002
Austria-Hungary 226 819 3,469 16,479 8,681 39,814 18,798
Ottoman Empire 672 3,537 11,583 66,558 59,272
Portugal 88 432 656 1,852 1,612 10,418 17,570 23,406 10,310 4,230 12,033
United States 819 1,200 777 2,640 2,631

Origin of the immigrants between 1857 and 1920 edit

Net Immigration by Nationality (1857–1920)[25]
Subjecthood or Citizenship Total numbers of immigrants Percentage of total
  Italy 2,341,126 44.72%
  Spain 1,602,752 30.61%
  France 221,074 4.22%
  Russian Empire (1) 163,862 3.13%
  Ottoman Empire 141,622 2.71%
  Austria-Hungary (2) 87,266 1.67%
  German Empire 69,896 1.34%
  United Kingdom (3) 60,477 1.16%
   Switzerland 34,525 0.66%
  Portugal 30,729 0.59%
  Belgium 23,549 0.45%
  Denmark 10,644 0.20%
  Netherlands 8,111 0.15%
  United States 8,067 0.15%
  Sweden 2,223 0.04%
  Luxembourg[26](4) 1,000 0.02%
Others 428,471 8.18%
Total 5,235,394[27]

Notes:

(1) This figure includes Russians, Ukrainians, Volga Germans, Belarusians, Poles, Lithuanians, etc. that entered Argentina with passport of the Russian Empire.
(2) This figure includes all the peoples that lived within the boundaries of the Austro-Hungarian Empire between 1867 and 1918: Austrians, Hungarians, Czechs, Slovaks, Slovenians, Croatians, Bosniaks, Ruthenians and people from the regions of Vojvodina in Serbia, Trentino-Alto Adige/Südtirol and Trieste in Italy, Transylvania in Romania, and Galicia in Poland.
(3) The United Kingdom included Ireland until 1922; that is why most of the British immigrants -nicknamed "ingleses"- were in fact Irish, Welsh and Scottish.
(4) Around 0.5% of Luxembourg's total population emigrated to Argentina during the 1880s.

Source: Dirección Nacional de Migraciones: Infografías., that information was modified – figures there are by nationality, not by country.

Origin of the immigrants between 1857 and 1940 edit

Immigration by Nationality (1857–1940)
Subjecthood or Citizenship Total numbers of immigrants Percentage of total
  Italy 2,970,000 36.7%
  Spain 2,080,000 25.7%
  France 239,000 2.9%
  Poland[28] 180,000 2.2%
  Russia[29] 177,000 2.2%
  Ottoman Empire[30] 174,000 2.1%
  Austro-Hungarian[31] 111,000 1.4%
  United Kingdom[32] 75,000 1.0%
  Germany[33] 72,000 0.9%
  Portugal[34] 65,000 0.8%
  Yugoslavia[35] 48,000 0.6%
   Switzerland 44,000 0.6%
  Belgium 26,000 0.3%
  Denmark 18,000 0.2%
  United States 12,000 0.2%
  Netherlands 10,000 0.2%
  Sweden 7,000 0.1%
Others 223,000 2.8%
Total[Note 1] 8,098,000 100.0%

Source: National Migration, 1970.

  1. ^ About 52% of immigrants in the period 1857–1939 were definitively settled.

Legacy of immigration edit

 
A statue honoring the immigrants, in Rosario

Argentine popular culture, especially in the Río de la Plata basin, was heavily marked by Italian and Spanish immigration.

Post-independence politicians tried to steer Argentina consistently away from identification with monarchical Spain, perceived as backward and ultraconservative, towards relatively progressive national models like those of France or the United States. Millions of poor peasants from Galicia arriving in Argentina not only did little to alter this position but also immigrated to Argentina because of it, steering clear of the United States and Britain.

Lunfardo, the jargon enshrined in tango lyrics, is laden with Italianisms, often also found in the mainstream colloquial dialect (Rioplatense Spanish). Common dishes in the central area of the country (milanesa, fainá, polenta, pascualina) have Italian names and origins.

Immigrant communities have given Buenos Aires some of its most famous landmarks, such as the Torre de los Ingleses (Tower of the English) or the Monumento de los Españoles (Monument of the Spaniards). Ukrainians, Armenians, Swiss, and many others built monuments and churches at popular spots throughout the capital.

Argentina celebrates Immigrant's Day on September 4 since 1949, by a decree of the Executive Branch. The National Immigrant's Festival is celebrated in Oberá, Misiones, during the first fortnight of September, since 1980. There are other celebrations of ethnic diversity throughout the country, such as the National Meeting and Festival of the Communities in Rosario (typically at the beginning of November). Many cities and towns in Argentina also feature monuments and memorials dedicated to immigration. There are also Immigrant's Festivals (or Collectivities Festivals) throughout the country, for example: Córdoba, Bariloche, Berisso, Esperanza, Venado Tuerto, and Comodoro Rivadavia have their own Immigrant's festivals. These festivals tend to be local, and they are not advertised or promoted nationally like the festivals in Rosario and Oberá.

Immigration in recent times edit

Besides substantial immigration from neighboring countries, during the middle and late 1990s Argentina received significant numbers of people from Asian countries such as Korea (both North and South), China, Vietnam, Cambodia, and Japan which joined the previously existing Sino-Japanese communities in Buenos Aires. Despite the economic and financial crisis Argentina suffered at the start of the 21st century, people from all over the world continued arriving to the country, because of their immigration-friendly policy and other reasons.

According to official data, between 1992 and 2003 an average 13,187 people per year immigrated legally in Argentina. The government calculates that 504,000 people entered the country during the same period, giving about 345,000 undocumented immigrants. The same source gives a plausible total figure of 750,000 undocumented immigrants currently residing in Argentina.

From 2004 onwards, after Immigration Law 25871[36] was sanctioned, which makes the State responsible for guaranteeing access to health and education for immigrants, many foreigners choose Buenos Aires as their destination to work or study. Between 2006–2008 and 2012–2013 a relatively large group of Senegal nationals (4500 in total) have immigrated to Argentina, 90 percent of which have refugee status.[37]

In April 2006, the national government started the Patria Grande plan to regularize the migratory situation of undocumented immigrants. The plan attempts to ease the bureaucratic process of getting documentation and residence papers, and is aimed at citizens of Mercosur countries and its associated states (Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Paraguay, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela). The plan came after a scandal and a wave of indignation caused by fire in a Buenos Aires sweatshop, which revealed the widespread utilization of undocumented Bolivian immigrants as cheap labor force in inhumane conditions, under a regime of virtual debt slavery.

As of 2020, Argentina counted with a positive net migration rate (one of the only three such countries in the region, alongside Chile and Costa Rica) and remains a major destination for migrants within Latin America and the Caribbean.[38]

However, since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022, in light of the international sanctions on Russian passports, various Russian couples and pregnant Russian women, started to emigrate to Argentina in hopes of acquiring Argentine passport to, rather continuing their journey to Europe or to permanently establish in Argentina with their children.[39] As of July 2023, more than 18,500 Russians have come to Argentina after Russia invaded Ukraine. Argentina does not require a visa for Russians citizens to enter the country as tourists and it also allows the parents of children born on Argentinian soil to receive residency, and, later, a passport. This oppurtunity led to that about 10,500 pregnant Russians traveled to Argentina to give birth in 2022.[40]

Country of birth of Argentine residents edit

According to the National Institute of Statistics and Census of Argentina 1,805,957 of the Argentine resident population were born outside Argentina, representing 4.50% of the total Argentine resident population.[41][42][43][44][45]

Place Country 2010 2001 1991
1   Paraguay 550,713 325,046 254,115
2   Bolivia 345,272 233,464 145,670
3   Chile 191,147 212,429 247,987
4   Peru 157,514 88,260 15,939
5   Italy 147,499 216,718 356,923
6   Uruguay 116,592 117,564 135,406
7   Spain 94,030 134,417 244,212
8   Brazil 41,330 34,712 33,966
9   United States 19,147 10,552 9,755
10   Colombia 17,576 3,876 2,638
11   China 8,929 4,184 2,297
12   Germany 8,416 10,362 15,451
13   South Korea 7,321 8,290 8,371
14   France 6,995 6,578 6,309
15   Portugal 6,785 9,340 13,229
16   Poland 6,428 13,703 28,811
17   Venezuela 6,379 2,774 1,934
18   Mexico 6,042 3,323 2,277
19   Dominican Republic 5,661 1,497 N/D
20   Ukraine 4,830 8,290 3,498
Other countries 57,351 86,561 99,422
TOTAL 1,805,957 1,531,940 1,628,210

See also edit

Immigrant communities in Argentina edit

References edit

  1. ^ Ferrer, Aldo (1884). "La economía argentina". Buenos Aires: Fondo de Cultura Económica. XV: 37.
  2. ^ Mörner, Magnus (1969). La mezcla de razas en la historia de América Latina. Buenos Aires: Paidós.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. ^ Foerster, Robert Franz (1919). The Italian Emigration of Our Times. pp. 223–278.
  4. ^ "Extranjeros". Cuidad y Derechos.
  5. ^ Del Gesso, Ernesto (2003). Pampas, araucanos y ranqueles: breve historia de estos pueblos y su final como nación indígena. Ciudad Gótica. p. 145.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  6. ^ "Argentina: A New Era of Migration and Migration Policy". migrationpolicy.org. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  7. ^ González, Alberto Rex; Pérez, José A. (1976). "Historia argentina: Argentina indígena, vísperas de la conquista". Editorial Paidós: 42.
  8. ^ Pierotti, Daniela. "Blanco sobre negro (2º Parte): La discriminación cotidiana y las políticas xenófobas". from the original on February 18, 2008.
  9. ^ "Em crise, Argentina vê migração de brasileiros crescer 80,8% em um ano". November 5, 2018.
  10. ^ "Time For Argentina (Brasil)".
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on July 30, 2008. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  12. ^ Rocchi, Fernando (2006). Chimneys in the Desert: Industrialization in Argentina During the Export Boom Years, 1870–1930. Stanford University Press. p. 19.
  13. ^ Solberg, Carl (1970). Immigration and Nationalism: Argentina and Chile, 1890-1914. University of Texas Press. pp. 19–20. ISBN 9781477305027.
  14. ^ "Ley de Migraciones". Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  15. ^ "Decreto 616/2010". Retrieved January 24, 2013.
  16. ^ Baily, Samuel L., 1999, Immigrants in the Lands of Promise, Italians in Buenos Aires and New York City, 1970-1914. p. 54 ISBN 0801488826
  17. ^ (PDF). www.cels.org.ar. Archived from the original (PDF) on June 10, 2007. Retrieved January 15, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  18. ^ (PDF). docentes.fe.unl.pt. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 14, 2011. Retrieved January 15, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  19. ^ Wasylyk, Mykola (1994). Ukrainians in Argentina (Chapter), in Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World, edited by Ann Lencyk Pawliczko, University of Toronto Press: Toronto, pp. 420–443
  20. ^ "I Luv SA: The Argentinian Boers: The Oldest Boer Diaspora". Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  21. ^ "End of era for Argentina's Afrikaners". IOL. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  22. ^ "The Boers at the end of the world". November 10, 2013. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  23. ^ "Argentinian community of bitter Boers dwindles". Business Day Live. Retrieved April 2, 2016.
  24. ^ Migration from Europe to the Americas: A Panel-Data Analysis
  25. ^ "Dirección Nacional de Migraciones: Inmigración 1857–1920" (PDF). Retrieved April 30, 2014.
  26. ^ Claude Wey (2002). [Emigration from Luxembourg to Argentina] (PDF). Migrance (in French) (20). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 22, 2011. Retrieved June 25, 2007.
  27. ^ Dirección Nacional de Inmigraciones: Hotel de Inmigrantes. See pie chart at the bottom on the left; Inmigrantes Arribados: 5.235.394
  28. ^ Includes Ukrainian, Jewish and Belarus in eastern Poland. Los colonos eslavos del Nordeste Argentino
  29. ^ It includes Ukrainian, Volga Germans, Belarusian, Polish, Lithuanian etc. which then be submitted to the Russian Zarato admitted with Russian passports.
  30. ^ The distinction between Turkish, Palestinian, Syria, Lebanese and Arabs only made at the official level after 1920. until that time, all they emigrated with Turkish passport-which generalized the use of the term until today-to be legally residing in the Ottoman Empire. In fact, each identified with their village or town of origin.
  31. ^ In 1867 the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary signed a treaty known as the Ausgleich, creating a dual monarchy Austria-Hungary. It disintegrated in late 1918 to the World War I. What was the Austro-Hungarian Empire is currently distributed in thirteen European states that are now the nations of Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia-Herzegovina and regions Vojvodina to Serbia, Bocas de Kotor to Montenegro, Trentino South Tyrol and Trieste in Italy, Transylvania and of the Banat to Romania, Galicia to Poland and Ruthenia (region Subcarpathian to Ukraine), most of the immigrants to "Austro-Hungarian" passport were people from groups: Croatian, Polish, Hungary, Slovenian, Czech, Romanian and even Italian Northeast.
  32. ^ The United Kingdom to 1922 included all Ireland; much of the British immigrants – then commonly called "English" – were of Irish origin, coupled with the Welsh and Scottish source population.
  33. ^ Thomas, Adam, ed. (2005). Germany and the Americas: Culture, Politics and History. Transatlantic Relations: A Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 30. ISBN 978-1-85109-628-2. Retrieved December 22, 2017.
  34. ^ Portugal to 1974 owned units as Angola, Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau, Macao, Mozambique, São Tomé and Príncipe, Timor Leste
  35. ^ The state known generically as Yugoslavia grouped, between 1918 and 1992, existing independent states of Bosnia-Herzegovina, Croatia, Slovenia, Montenegro, North Macedonia and Serbia.
  36. ^ http://www.migraciones.gov.ar/pdf_varios/campana_grafica/pdf/Libro_Ley_25.871.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  37. ^ Firpo, Javier (September 23, 2018). "Senegaleses en Argentina: estudian español para dejar de vender en la calle". www.clarin.com.
  38. ^ World Migration Report 2022. Geneva: International Organization for Migration. December 1, 2021. ISBN 978-92-9268-076-3. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
  39. ^ "Crackdown on 'birth tourism' as pregnant Russians flock to Argentina". The Guardian. February 10, 2023. from the original on July 22, 2023.
  40. ^ "Undertones: Inside Russian influencer chats in Argentina". Global Voices. July 20, 2023.
  41. ^ [Recent trends in international migration] (PDF). Revista informativa del censo 2001 (in Spanish). INDEC (12). February 2004. ISSN 0329-7586. Archived from the original on November 14, 2011.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  42. ^ Investigación de la Migración Internacional en Latinoamérica (IMILA) 2008-05-14 at the Wayback Machine Centro Latinoamericano y Caribeño de Demografía (CELADE). Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (CEPAL).
  43. ^ [National Census of Population and Housing 2001]. INDEC – Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Censos (in Spanish). Archived from the original on June 3, 2014.
  44. ^ (Press release). INDEC. Archived from the original on September 2, 2011. Retrieved September 2, 2011.
  45. ^ Censo 2010 October 29, 2013, at the Wayback Machine INDEC.

External links edit

  • Centro de Estudios Migratorios de LAtinoamericanos (CEMLA), a searchable immigration database of Argentina by name, last name and date period (alternative URL for this database search)
  • (in English) CasaHistoria — European immigration to Argentina
  • Immigrant's Day on the Ministry of Education website
  • Bajaron de los barcos September 15, 2008, at the Wayback Machine ("They came down from the ships") – figures, timeline and other details of Argentine immigration
  • Patria Grande July 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine, National Program of Migratory Documentary Normalization
  • , news and video about this event (in Spanish)
  • La Nación, 17 April 2006, Más de 10 mil inmigrantes iniciaron trámites de regularización
  • "Inmigración a la Argentina (1850–1950)" – monografias.com
  • [1]
  • Migration Information Source
  • Immigration policy in Argentina
  • Visas and Procedures. How do you get a visa?

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This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Immigration to Argentina news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this template message You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Spanish May 2020 Click show for important translation instructions View a machine translated version of the Spanish article Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there 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reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Immigration to Argentina began in several millennia BCE with the arrival of different populations from Asia to the Americas through Beringia according to the most accepted theories and were slowly populating the Americas Upon arrival of the Spaniards the native inhabitants of Argentine territory were approximately 300 000 1 people belonging to many Indigenous American civilizations cultures and tribes Immigration to Argentina late 19th centuryImmigrants Hotel Buenos Aires Built in 1906 it could accommodate up to 4 000 The history of immigration to Argentina can be divided into several major stages Spanish colonization between the 16th and 18th century mostly male 2 largely assimilated with the natives through a process called miscegenation Although not all of the current territory was effectively colonized by the Spaniards The Chaco region Eastern Patagonia the current province of La Pampa the south zone of Cordoba and the major part of the current provinces of Buenos Aires San Luis and Mendoza were maintained under indigenous dominance Guaycurues and Wichis from the Chaco region Huarpes in the Cuyana and north Neuquino Ranqueles in the east of Cuyo and north from the Pampean region Tehuelches and Mapuches in the Pampean and Patagonian regions and Selknam and Yamanas in de Tierra del Fuego archipelago which were taken over by the Mapuches first to the east of Cordillera de los Andes mixing interracially with the Pehuenches in the middle of the 18th century and continuing until 1830 with the indigenous Pampas and north from Patagonia which were conquered by the Argentine State after its independence The African population forcibly introduced from sub Saharan Africa mainly of Bantu origin taken to work as slaves in the colony between the 17th and 19th centuries in great numbers Immigration mostly European and to a lesser extent from Western Asia including considerable Arab and Jewish currents produced between the end of the 19th century and the first half of the 20th century particularly Italians 3 and Spaniards in that quantitative order promoted by the Constitution of 1852 that prohibited establishing limitations to enter the country to those strangers that bring through the purpose of working the land bettering the industries and introducing and teaching the sciences and the arts 4 and order the State to promote European immigration even though after predomination of Mediterranean immigrants from Eastern Europe and the western Asia Added to this is the Alberdian precept of to govern is to populate These politics were destined to generate a rural social fabric and to finalize the occupation of the Pampean Patagonian and Chaco territories that until the 1880s were inhabited by diverse indigenous cultures 5 European immigration in the 19th century and early 20th century mainly Italian and Spanish focused on colonization and sponsored by the government sometimes on lands conquered from the native inhabitants by the Conquest of the Desert in the last quarter of the century 6 The immigration from nearby countries Uruguay Chile Brazil Bolivia and Paraguay from the 19th to 21st century These immigration streams date back to the first agro pottery civilizations that appeared in Argentine territory 7 8 From the 1980s and 1990s the migration currents especially come from Chile Paraguay Bolivia Peru Asia particularly from Korea China and Japan in this period and Eastern Europe During the 21st century a part of Argentine migrants and their descendants returned from Europe and the United States In addition immigrants from Bolivia Paraguay and Peru now there are also migratory streams from China Brazil 9 10 Colombia Cuba Venezuela Senegal Ecuador Dominican Republic and Haiti Mostly urban immigration during the era of rapid growth in the late 19th century from 1880 onwards and the first half of the 20th century before and after World War I and also after the Spanish Civil War 11 Contents 1 History 1 1 Colonial era 2 Support and control of immigration 3 Features of immigration 3 1 Origin of the immigrants between 1857 and 1920 3 2 Origin of the immigrants between 1857 and 1940 4 Legacy of immigration 5 Immigration in recent times 6 Country of birth of Argentine residents 7 See also 7 1 Immigrant communities in Argentina 8 References 9 External linksHistory editColonial era edit The Spanish migration flows which conquered and colonised the area that is now Argentina were mainly three The one which came from the northwest those Peruvian lands conquered by Diego de Almagro and Francisco Pizarro being the cities of Lima Cusco and Potosi the scattering centres The one which came from the west from Chile across the Andes from the cities of Santiago and Coquimbo The one which came from the east that used the Rio de la Plata and its tributaries especially the Parana River to settle on the banks thereof Also this migration flow settled in Asuncion Paraguay where they colonised much of the region The Spanish conquistadores and settlers were mainly from Biscay as well from Galicia and Portugal founding cities and establishing estancias for supplies of agricultural and livestock products The scale of operations was reduced mainly focused on the domestic market and the provision of the crown Support and control of immigration edit nbsp Copy of a colonization contract in the history museum of San Jose Entre RiosSince its unification as a country Argentine rulers intended the country to welcome immigration Article 25 of the 1853 Constitution reads The Federal Government will encourage European immigration and it will not restrict limit or burden with any taxes the entrance into Argentine territory of foreigners who come with the goal of working the land improving the industries and teach the sciences and the arts The Preamble of the Constitution dictates a number of goals justice peace defence welfare and liberty that apply to all men in the world who wish to dwell on Argentine soil The Constitution incorporates along with other influences the thought of Juan Bautista Alberdi who expressed his opinion on the matter in succinct terms to govern is to populate As a result of policies promoting immigration to the once sparsely populated country 11 of the Argentinian population and 50 of the population of Buenos Aires was made up of newly arrived immigrants by 1869 12 The legal and organisational precedents of today s National Directorate for Migration DNM can be found in 1825 when Rivadavia created an Immigration Commission After the commission was dissolved the government of Rosas continued to allow immigration Urquiza under whose sponsorship the Constitution was drawn encouraged the establishment of agricultural colonies in the Littoral western Mesopotamia and north eastern Pampas The first law dealing with immigration policies was Law 817 of Immigration and Colonization of 1876 The General Immigration Office was created in 1898 together with the Hotel de Inmigrantes Immigrants Hotel in Buenos Aires The liberal rulers of the late 19th century saw immigration as the possibility of bringing people from supposedly more civilised enlightened countries into a sparsely populated land thus diminishing the influence of aboriginal elements and turning Argentina into a modern society with a dynamic economy These politicians and intellectuals favored northern European immigration in particular 13 However immigrants did not bring only their knowledge and skills In 1902 a Law of Residence Ley de Residencia was passed mandating the expulsion of foreigners who compromise national security or disturb public order and in 1910 a Law of Social Defence Ley de Defensa Social explicitly named ideologies deemed to have such effects These laws were a reaction by the ruling elite against imported ideas such as labor unionism anarchism and other forms of popular organisation The modern National Directorate for Migration was created by decree on 4 February 1949 under the Technical Secretariat of the Presidency in order to deal with the new post war immigration scenario New regulations were added to the Directorate by Law 22439 of 1981 and a decree of 1994 but the current regulations are the Law 25871 of 2004 and the decree 616 of 2010 14 15 Features of immigration edit nbsp European born Argentines by provinces and territories 1914 Argentine Census A large immigration was experienced all over the country except for the Northwest which consisted overwhelmingly by Europeans in a 9 10 ratio However Neuquen and Corrientes had a small European population but a large South American immigration particularly the former mainly from Chile and Brazil respectively The Chaco region North had a moderate influx from Bolivia and Paraguay as well The majority of immigrants since the 19th century have come from Europe mostly from Italy and Spain Also notable were Jewish immigrants escaping persecution giving Argentina the highest Jewish population in Latin America and the 7th in all the world The total population of Argentina rose from 4 million in 1895 to 7 9 million in 1914 and to 15 8 million in 1947 during this time the country was settled by 1 5 million Spaniards and 3 8 million Italians between 1861 and 1920 16 but not all remained Also arrived were Poles Russians French more than 100 000 each Germans and Austrians also more than 100 000 Portuguese Greeks Ukrainians Croats Czechs Irish British Swiss Dutch Hungarians Scandinavians the vast majority being Danes and people from other European and Middle Eastern countries prominently Syria Lebanon Palestine Armenia and Turkey These trends made Argentina the country with the second largest number of immigrants with 6 6 million second only to the United States with 27 million In addition Argentine immigrant documents also show immigrants from Australia South Africa and The United States arriving in Argentina 17 18 clarification needed Most immigrants arrived through the port of Buenos Aires and stayed in the capital or within Buenos Aires Province as it still happens today In 1895 immigrants accounted for 52 of the population in the Capital and 31 in the province of Buenos Aires some provinces of the littoral such as Santa Fe had about 40 and the Patagonian provinces about 50 In 1914 before World War I caused many European immigrants to return to their homeland in order to join the respective armies the overall rate of foreign born population reached its peak almost 30 A significant number of immigrants settled in the countryside in the interior of the country especially the littoral provinces creating agricultural colonies These included many Jews fleeing pogroms in Europe and sponsored by Maurice de Hirsch s Jewish Colonization Association they were later termed Jewish gauchos The first such Jewish colony was Moiseville now the village of Moises Ville Through most of the 20th century Argentina held one of the largest Jewish communities near 500 000 after the US France Israel and Russia and by far the largest in Latin America see History of the Jews in Argentina Argentina is home to a large community from the Arab world made up mostly of immigrants from Syria Lebanon Palestine Armenia and Turkey Most are Christians of the Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic Maronite Churches with small Muslim and Jewish minorities Many have gained prominent status in national business and politics including former president Carlos Menem the son of Syrian settlers from the province of La Rioja see Arab Argentine The Welsh settlement of Argentina whilst not as large as those from other countries was nevertheless one of the largest in the planet and had an important cultural influence on the Patagonian Chubut Province Other nationalities have also settled in particular areas of the country such as Irish in Formosa and the Mesopotamia region the Ukrainians in Misiones where they constitute approximately 9 of the population 19 Well known and culturally strong are the German speaking communities such as those of German descendants themselves both those from Germany itself and those ethnic Germans from other parts of Europe such as Volga Germans Austrian and Swiss ones Strong German descendant populations can be found in the Mesopotamia region especially Entre Rios and Misiones provinces many neighborhoods in Buenos Aires city such as Belgrano or Palermo the Buenos Aires Province itself strong German settlement in Coronel Suarez Tornquist and other areas Cordoba the Oktoberfest celebration in Villa General Belgrano is specially famous and all along the Patagonian region including important cities such as San Carlos de Bariloche an important tourist spot near the Andes mountain chain which was especially influenced by German settlements The South African Boers Patagonia houses a unique community of South African Boers who settled there after the Second Boer War against the United Kingdom which ended in 1902 Between 1903 and 1909 up to 800 Boer families trekked by ship to this lonely spot on Argentina s east coast about 1500 km north of Tierra del Fuego There are an estimated 100 120 Boer families still living on the land assigned to them by General Julio Roca They are mainly an agricultural community 20 21 22 23 Other nationalities such as Spaniards although they have specific localities such as the centre of Buenos Aires they are more uniformly present all around the country and form the general background of Argentine population today European immigration to Argentina 1870 1914 24 Origin Period1857 1859 1860 1869 1870 1879 1880 1889 1890 1899 1900 1909 1910 1919 1920 1929 1930 1931 1940 1949 1950 1959Belgium 68 518 628 15 096 2 694 2 931 2 193 Switzerland 219 1 562 6 203 11 569 4 875 4 793 4 578 Denmark 303 1 128 1 282 3 437 4 576 France 720 6 360 32 938 79 422 41 048 37 340 25 258 Germany 178 1 212 3 522 12 958 9 204 20 064 22 148 60 130 1 66 327Italy clarification needed 9 006 3 9795 027 93 602 51 69541 997 156 716 110 99445 722 472 179 98 655373 524 411 764 374 74537 019 848 533 318 841529 692 712 310 459 930252 380 Netherlands 37 111 111 4 315 675 1 622 1 264 Spain 2 440 20 602 44 802 148 398 114 731 672 941 598 098 Sweden 186 632 490 592 508 441 United Kingdom 359 2 708 9 265 15 692 4 691 13 186 13 560 Russia 80 407 464 4 155 15 665 73 845 48 002 Austria Hungary 226 819 3 469 16 479 8 681 39 814 18 798 Ottoman Empire 672 3 537 11 583 66 558 59 272 Portugal 88 432 656 1 852 1 612 10 418 17 570 23 406 10 310 4 230 12 033United States 819 1 200 777 2 640 2 631 Origin of the immigrants between 1857 and 1920 edit Net Immigration by Nationality 1857 1920 25 Subjecthood or Citizenship Total numbers of immigrants Percentage of total nbsp Italy 2 341 126 44 72 nbsp Spain 1 602 752 30 61 nbsp France 221 074 4 22 nbsp Russian Empire 1 163 862 3 13 nbsp Ottoman Empire 141 622 2 71 nbsp Austria Hungary 2 87 266 1 67 nbsp German Empire 69 896 1 34 nbsp United Kingdom 3 60 477 1 16 nbsp Switzerland 34 525 0 66 nbsp Portugal 30 729 0 59 nbsp Belgium 23 549 0 45 nbsp Denmark 10 644 0 20 nbsp Netherlands 8 111 0 15 nbsp United States 8 067 0 15 nbsp Sweden 2 223 0 04 nbsp Luxembourg 26 4 1 000 0 02 Others 428 471 8 18 Total 5 235 394 27 Notes 1 This figure includes Russians Ukrainians Volga Germans Belarusians Poles Lithuanians etc that entered Argentina with passport of the Russian Empire 2 This figure includes all the peoples that lived within the boundaries of the Austro Hungarian Empire between 1867 and 1918 Austrians Hungarians Czechs Slovaks Slovenians Croatians Bosniaks Ruthenians and people from the regions of Vojvodina in Serbia Trentino Alto Adige Sudtirol and Trieste in Italy Transylvania in Romania and Galicia in Poland 3 The United Kingdom included Ireland until 1922 that is why most of the British immigrants nicknamed ingleses were in fact Irish Welsh and Scottish 4 Around 0 5 of Luxembourg s total population emigrated to Argentina during the 1880s Source Direccion Nacional de Migraciones Infografias that information was modified figures there are by nationality not by country Origin of the immigrants between 1857 and 1940 edit Immigration by Nationality 1857 1940 Subjecthood or Citizenship Total numbers of immigrants Percentage of total nbsp Italy 2 970 000 36 7 nbsp Spain 2 080 000 25 7 nbsp France 239 000 2 9 nbsp Poland 28 180 000 2 2 nbsp Russia 29 177 000 2 2 nbsp Ottoman Empire 30 174 000 2 1 nbsp Austro Hungarian 31 111 000 1 4 nbsp United Kingdom 32 75 000 1 0 nbsp Germany 33 72 000 0 9 nbsp Portugal 34 65 000 0 8 nbsp Yugoslavia 35 48 000 0 6 nbsp Switzerland 44 000 0 6 nbsp Belgium 26 000 0 3 nbsp Denmark 18 000 0 2 nbsp United States 12 000 0 2 nbsp Netherlands 10 000 0 2 nbsp Sweden 7 000 0 1 Others 223 000 2 8 Total Note 1 8 098 000 100 0 Source National Migration 1970 About 52 of immigrants in the period 1857 1939 were definitively settled Legacy of immigration edit nbsp A statue honoring the immigrants in RosarioArgentine popular culture especially in the Rio de la Plata basin was heavily marked by Italian and Spanish immigration Post independence politicians tried to steer Argentina consistently away from identification with monarchical Spain perceived as backward and ultraconservative towards relatively progressive national models like those of France or the United States Millions of poor peasants from Galicia arriving in Argentina not only did little to alter this position but also immigrated to Argentina because of it steering clear of the United States and Britain Lunfardo the jargon enshrined in tango lyrics is laden with Italianisms often also found in the mainstream colloquial dialect Rioplatense Spanish Common dishes in the central area of the country milanesa faina polenta pascualina have Italian names and origins Immigrant communities have given Buenos Aires some of its most famous landmarks such as the Torre de los Ingleses Tower of the English or the Monumento de los Espanoles Monument of the Spaniards Ukrainians Armenians Swiss and many others built monuments and churches at popular spots throughout the capital Argentina celebrates Immigrant s Day on September 4 since 1949 by a decree of the Executive Branch The National Immigrant s Festival is celebrated in Obera Misiones during the first fortnight of September since 1980 There are other celebrations of ethnic diversity throughout the country such as the National Meeting and Festival of the Communities in Rosario typically at the beginning of November Many cities and towns in Argentina also feature monuments and memorials dedicated to immigration There are also Immigrant s Festivals or Collectivities Festivals throughout the country for example Cordoba Bariloche Berisso Esperanza Venado Tuerto and Comodoro Rivadavia have their own Immigrant s festivals These festivals tend to be local and they are not advertised or promoted nationally like the festivals in Rosario and Obera Immigration in recent times editBesides substantial immigration from neighboring countries during the middle and late 1990s Argentina received significant numbers of people from Asian countries such as Korea both North and South China Vietnam Cambodia and Japan which joined the previously existing Sino Japanese communities in Buenos Aires Despite the economic and financial crisis Argentina suffered at the start of the 21st century people from all over the world continued arriving to the country because of their immigration friendly policy and other reasons According to official data between 1992 and 2003 an average 13 187 people per year immigrated legally in Argentina The government calculates that 504 000 people entered the country during the same period giving about 345 000 undocumented immigrants The same source gives a plausible total figure of 750 000 undocumented immigrants currently residing in Argentina From 2004 onwards after Immigration Law 25871 36 was sanctioned which makes the State responsible for guaranteeing access to health and education for immigrants many foreigners choose Buenos Aires as their destination to work or study Between 2006 2008 and 2012 2013 a relatively large group of Senegal nationals 4500 in total have immigrated to Argentina 90 percent of which have refugee status 37 In April 2006 the national government started the Patria Grande plan to regularize the migratory situation of undocumented immigrants The plan attempts to ease the bureaucratic process of getting documentation and residence papers and is aimed at citizens of Mercosur countries and its associated states Bolivia Brazil Chile Colombia Ecuador Paraguay Peru Uruguay and Venezuela The plan came after a scandal and a wave of indignation caused by fire in a Buenos Aires sweatshop which revealed the widespread utilization of undocumented Bolivian immigrants as cheap labor force in inhumane conditions under a regime of virtual debt slavery As of 2020 Argentina counted with a positive net migration rate one of the only three such countries in the region alongside Chile and Costa Rica and remains a major destination for migrants within Latin America and the Caribbean 38 However since the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022 in light of the international sanctions on Russian passports various Russian couples and pregnant Russian women started to emigrate to Argentina in hopes of acquiring Argentine passport to rather continuing their journey to Europe or to permanently establish in Argentina with their children 39 As of July 2023 more than 18 500 Russians have come to Argentina after Russia invaded Ukraine Argentina does not require a visa for Russians citizens to enter the country as tourists and it also allows the parents of children born on Argentinian soil to receive residency and later a passport This oppurtunity led to that about 10 500 pregnant Russians traveled to Argentina to give birth in 2022 40 Country of birth of Argentine residents editAccording to the National Institute of Statistics and Census of Argentina 1 805 957 of the Argentine resident population were born outside Argentina representing 4 50 of the total Argentine resident population 41 42 43 44 45 Place Country 2010 2001 19911 nbsp Paraguay 550 713 325 046 254 1152 nbsp Bolivia 345 272 233 464 145 6703 nbsp Chile 191 147 212 429 247 9874 nbsp Peru 157 514 88 260 15 9395 nbsp Italy 147 499 216 718 356 9236 nbsp Uruguay 116 592 117 564 135 4067 nbsp Spain 94 030 134 417 244 2128 nbsp Brazil 41 330 34 712 33 9669 nbsp United States 19 147 10 552 9 75510 nbsp Colombia 17 576 3 876 2 63811 nbsp China 8 929 4 184 2 29712 nbsp Germany 8 416 10 362 15 45113 nbsp South Korea 7 321 8 290 8 37114 nbsp France 6 995 6 578 6 30915 nbsp Portugal 6 785 9 340 13 22916 nbsp Poland 6 428 13 703 28 81117 nbsp Venezuela 6 379 2 774 1 93418 nbsp Mexico 6 042 3 323 2 27719 nbsp Dominican Republic 5 661 1 497 N D20 nbsp Ukraine 4 830 8 290 3 498Other countries 57 351 86 561 99 422TOTAL 1 805 957 1 531 940 1 628 210See also edit nbsp Argentina portalDemographics of Argentina Great European immigration wave to Argentina Immigration to Uruguay National Directorate for Migration Argentina Immigrant communities in Argentina edit Afro Argentines Arab Argentines Argentines of European descent Asian Argentines Austrian Argentines Bulgarians in South America Chinese Argentines Dutch Argentines English settlement in Argentina French Argentines German Argentines Greek Argentines Hungarian Argentines Irish Argentine Italian Argentine History of the Jews in Argentina Jewish gauchos Polish Argentines Portuguese Argentine Russian Argentines Scottish Argentines Slovene Argentines Swedish Argentines Swiss ArgentinesReferences edit Ferrer Aldo 1884 La economia argentina Buenos Aires Fondo de Cultura Economica XV 37 Morner Magnus 1969 La mezcla de razas en la historia de America Latina Buenos Aires Paidos a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Foerster Robert Franz 1919 The Italian Emigration of Our Times pp 223 278 Extranjeros Cuidad y Derechos Del Gesso Ernesto 2003 Pampas araucanos y ranqueles breve historia de estos pueblos y su final como nacion indigena Ciudad Gotica p 145 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Argentina A New Era of Migration and Migration Policy migrationpolicy org Retrieved April 2 2016 Gonzalez Alberto Rex Perez Jose A 1976 Historia argentina Argentina indigena visperas de la conquista Editorial Paidos 42 Pierotti Daniela Blanco sobre negro 2º Parte La discriminacion cotidiana y las politicas xenofobas Archived from the original on February 18 2008 Em crise Argentina ve migracao de brasileiros crescer 80 8 em um ano November 5 2018 Time For Argentina Brasil Origins History of immigration from Argentina Immigration Museum Melbourne Australia Archived from the original on July 30 2008 Retrieved April 2 2016 Rocchi Fernando 2006 Chimneys in the Desert Industrialization in Argentina During the Export Boom Years 1870 1930 Stanford University Press p 19 Solberg Carl 1970 Immigration and Nationalism Argentina and Chile 1890 1914 University of Texas Press pp 19 20 ISBN 9781477305027 Ley de Migraciones Retrieved January 24 2013 Decreto 616 2010 Retrieved January 24 2013 Baily Samuel L 1999 Immigrants in the Lands of Promise Italians in Buenos Aires and New York City 1970 1914 p 54 ISBN 0801488826 Archived copy PDF www cels org ar Archived from the original PDF on June 10 2007 Retrieved January 15 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF docentes fe unl pt Archived from the original PDF on August 14 2011 Retrieved January 15 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Wasylyk Mykola 1994 Ukrainians in Argentina Chapter in Ukraine and Ukrainians Throughout the World edited by Ann Lencyk Pawliczko University of Toronto Press Toronto pp 420 443 I Luv SA The Argentinian Boers The Oldest Boer Diaspora Retrieved April 2 2016 End of era for Argentina s Afrikaners IOL Retrieved April 2 2016 The Boers at the end of the world November 10 2013 Retrieved April 2 2016 Argentinian community of bitter Boers dwindles Business Day Live Retrieved April 2 2016 Migration from Europe to the Americas A Panel Data Analysis Direccion Nacional de Migraciones Inmigracion 1857 1920 PDF Retrieved April 30 2014 Claude Wey 2002 L Emigration Luxembourgeoise vers l Argentine Emigration from Luxembourg to Argentina PDF Migrance in French 20 Archived from the original PDF on July 22 2011 Retrieved June 25 2007 Direccion Nacional de Inmigraciones Hotel de Inmigrantes See pie chart at the bottom on the left Inmigrantes Arribados 5 235 394 Includes Ukrainian Jewish and Belarus in eastern Poland Los colonos eslavos del Nordeste Argentino It includes Ukrainian Volga Germans Belarusian Polish Lithuanian etc which then be submitted to the Russian Zarato admitted with Russian passports The distinction between Turkish Palestinian Syria Lebanese and Arabs only made at the official level after 1920 until that time all they emigrated with Turkish passport which generalized the use of the term until today to be legally residing in the Ottoman Empire In fact each identified with their village or town of origin In 1867 the Austrian Empire and the Kingdom of Hungary signed a treaty known as the Ausgleich creating a dual monarchy Austria Hungary It disintegrated in late 1918 to the World War I What was the Austro Hungarian Empire is currently distributed in thirteen European states that are now the nations of Austria Hungary Czech Republic Slovakia Slovenia Croatia Bosnia Herzegovina and regions Vojvodina to Serbia Bocas de Kotor to Montenegro Trentino South Tyrol and Trieste in Italy Transylvania and of the Banat to Romania Galicia to Poland and Ruthenia region Subcarpathian to Ukraine most of the immigrants to Austro Hungarian passport were people from groups Croatian Polish Hungary Slovenian Czech Romanian and even Italian Northeast The United Kingdom to 1922 included all Ireland much of the British immigrants then commonly called English were of Irish origin coupled with the Welsh and Scottish source population Thomas Adam ed 2005 Germany and the Americas Culture Politics and History Transatlantic Relations A Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO p 30 ISBN 978 1 85109 628 2 Retrieved December 22 2017 Portugal to 1974 owned units as Angola Cape Verde Guinea Bissau Macao Mozambique Sao Tome and Principe Timor Leste The state known generically as Yugoslavia grouped between 1918 and 1992 existing independent states of Bosnia Herzegovina Croatia Slovenia Montenegro North Macedonia and Serbia http www migraciones gov ar pdf varios campana grafica pdf Libro Ley 25 871 pdf bare URL PDF Firpo Javier September 23 2018 Senegaleses en Argentina estudian espanol para dejar de vender en la calle www clarin com World Migration Report 2022 Geneva International Organization for Migration December 1 2021 ISBN 978 92 9268 076 3 Retrieved July 19 2022 Crackdown on birth tourism as pregnant Russians flock to Argentina The Guardian February 10 2023 Archived from the original on July 22 2023 Undertones Inside Russian influencer chats in Argentina Global Voices July 20 2023 Tendencias recientes de la inmigracion internacional Recent trends in international migration PDF Revista informativa del censo 2001 in Spanish INDEC 12 February 2004 ISSN 0329 7586 Archived from the original on November 14 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint unfit URL link Investigacion de la Migracion Internacional en Latinoamerica IMILA Archived 2008 05 14 at the Wayback Machine Centro Latinoamericano y Caribeno de Demografia CELADE Comision Economica para America Latina y el Caribe CEPAL Censo Nacional de Poblacion Hogares y Viviendas 2001 National Census of Population and Housing 2001 INDEC Instituto Nacional de Estadistica y Censos in Spanish Archived from the original on June 3 2014 Cuadro P6 Total del pais Poblacion total nacida en el extranjero por lugar de nacimiento segun sexo y grupos de edad Ano 2010 Press release INDEC Archived from the original on September 2 2011 Retrieved September 2 2011 Censo 2010 Archived October 29 2013 at the Wayback Machine INDEC External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Immigration in Argentina Centro de Estudios Migratorios de LAtinoamericanos CEMLA a searchable immigration database of Argentina by name last name and date period alternative URL for this database search in English CasaHistoria European immigration to Argentina Immigration and banking for expats in Argentina Immigrant s Day on the Ministry of Education website Conformacion de la Poblacion Argentina Bajaron de los barcos Archived September 15 2008 at the Wayback Machine They came down from the ships figures timeline and other details of Argentine immigration Patria Grande Archived July 23 2008 at the Wayback Machine National Program of Migratory Documentary Normalization Obera and the National Immigrant Festival news and video about this event in Spanish La Nacion 17 April 2006 Mas de 10 mil inmigrantes iniciaron tramites de regularizacion Inmigracion a la Argentina 1850 1950 monografias com Recent efforts among US immigrants to Argentina at mutual aid 2009 English 1 Migration Information Source Origins History of immigration from Argentina Immigration Museum Melbourne Australia Immigration policy in Argentina Visas and Procedures How do you get a visa Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Immigration to Argentina amp oldid 1193956396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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