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Immigration to the United States

Immigration has been a major source of population growth and cultural change throughout much of the history of the United States. In absolute numbers, the United States has by far the highest number of immigrant population in the world, with 50,661,149 people as of 2019.[1][2] This represents 19.1% of the 244 million international migrants worldwide, and 14.4% of the United States' population. In 2018, there were almost 90 million immigrants and U.S.-born children of immigrants in the United States, accounting for 28% of the overall U.S. population.[3]

Naturalization ceremony at Oakton High School in Fairfax County, Virginia, December 2015.
Immigrants to the United States take the Oath of Allegiance at a naturalization ceremony at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona, September 2010.
Population growth rate with and without migration in the U.S.

According to the 2016 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics, the United States admitted a total of 1.18 million legal immigrants (618k new arrivals, 565k status adjustments) in 2016.[4] Of these, 48% were the immediate relatives of United States citizens, 20% were family-sponsored, 13% were refugees or asylum seekers, 12% were employment-based preferences, 4.2% were part of the Diversity Immigrant Visa program, 1.4% were victims of a crime (U1) or their family members were (U2 to U5),[5] and 1.0% who were granted the Special Immigrant Visa (SIV) for Iraqis and Afghans employed by the United States Government.[4] The remaining 0.4% included small numbers from several other categories, including 0.2% who were granted suspension of deportation as an immediate relative of a citizen (Z13);[6] persons admitted under the Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act; children born after the issuance of a parent's visa; and certain parolees from the former Soviet Union, Cambodia, Laos, and Vietnam who were denied refugee status.[4]

Between 1921 and 1965, policies such as the national origins formula limited immigration and naturalization opportunities for people from areas outside Western Europe. Exclusion laws enacted as early as the 1880s generally prohibited or severely restricted immigration from Asia, and quota laws enacted in the 1920s curtailed Southern and Eastern European immigration. The civil rights movement led to the replacement[7] of these ethnic quotas with per-country limits for family-sponsored and employment-based preference visas.[8] Since then, the number of first-generation immigrants living in the United States has quadrupled.[9][10] The total immigrant population has stalled in recent years, especially since the election of Donald Trump and the COVID-19 pandemic. Census estimates show 45.3 million foreign born residents in March 2018 and 45.4 million in September 2021; the lowest 3 year increase in decades.[11]

In 2017, out of the U.S. foreign-born population, some 45% (20.7 million) were naturalized citizens, 27% (12.3 million) were lawful permanent residents, 6% (2.2 million) were temporary lawful residents, and 23% (10.5 million) were unauthorized immigrants.[12] The United States led the world in refugee resettlement for decades, admitting more refugees than the rest of the world combined.[13]

Research suggests that immigration is beneficial to the United States economy. With few exceptions, the evidence suggests that on average, immigration has positive economic effects on the native population, but it is mixed as to whether low-skilled immigration adversely affects low-skilled natives. Studies also show that immigrants have lower crime rates than natives in the United States.[14][15][16] The economic, social, and political aspects of immigration have caused controversy regarding such issues as maintaining ethnic homogeneity, workers for employers versus jobs for non-immigrants, settlement patterns, impact on upward social mobility, crime, and voting behavior.

History

 
Immigrants on ocean steamer passing the Statue of Liberty, New York City, 1887

American immigration history can be viewed in four epochs: the colonial period, the mid-19th century, the start of the 20th century, and post-1965. Each period brought distinct national groups, races, and ethnicities to the United States.

Colonial period

During the 17th century, approximately 400,000 English people migrated to America under European colonization.[17] They comprised 83.5% of the white population at the time of the first census in 1790.[18] From 1700 to 1775, between 350,000 and 500,000 Europeans immigrated: estimates vary in sources. Regarding English settlers of the 18th century, one source says 52,000 English migrated during the period of 1701 to 1775, although this figure is likely too low.[19][20] 400,000–450,000 of the 18th-century migrants were Scots, Scots-Irish from Ulster, Germans, Swiss, and French Huguenots.[21] Over half of all European immigrants to Colonial America during the 17th and 18th centuries arrived as indentured servants.[22] They numbered 350,000.[23] From 1770 to 1775 (the latter year being when the American Revolutionary War began), 7,000 English, 15,000 Scots, 13,200 Scots-Irish, 5,200 Germans, and 3,900 Irish Catholics migrated to the Thirteen Colonies.[24] According to Butler (2000), up to half of English migrants in the 18th century may have been young, single men who were well-skilled, trained artisans, like the Huguenots.[25] Based on scholarly analysis of names recorded at the time of the first census in 1790, English was the largest single ancestry in all U.S. states, ranging from a high of 82% in Massachusetts to a low of 35.3% in Pennsylvania, where Germans accounted for 33.3%.

Origins of immigrant stock in 1790

The Census Bureau published preliminary estimates of the origins of the colonial American population by scholarly classification of the names of all White heads of families recorded in the 1790 Census in a 1909 report entitled A Century of Population Growth.[26] These initial estimates were scrutinized and rejected following passage of the Immigration Act of 1924, when the government required accurate official estimates of the origins of the colonial stock population as basis for computing National Origins Formula immigration quotas in the 1920s. In 1927, proposed quotas based on CPG figures were rejected by the President's Committee chaired by the Secretaries of State, Commerce, and Labor, with the President reporting to Congress "the statistical and historical information available raises grave doubts as to the whole value of these computations as the basis for the purposes intended".[27] Concluding that CPG "had not been accepted by scholars as better than a first approximation of the truth", an extensive scientific revision was produced, in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies, as basis for computing contemporary legal immigration quotas.[28] For this task scholars estimated the proportion of names of unique derivation from each of the major national stocks present in the population as of the 1790 census. The final results, later also published in the journal of the American Historical Association, are presented below:[27]

  Estimated Nationalities of the White American population in the Continental United States as of the 1790 Census [27]

State or Territory  English [a]  Scotch  Scotch-Irish  Irish  German  Dutch  French  Swedish [b]  Spanish Other Total
# % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # % # %
  Connecticut 155,598 67.00% 5,109 2.20% 4,180 1.80% 2,555 1.10% 697 0.30% 600 0.26% 2,100 0.90% 25 0.01% - 61,372 26.43% 232,236
  Delaware 27,786 60.00% 3,705 8.00% 2,918 6.30% 2,501 5.40% 509 1.10% 2,000 4.32% 750 1.62% 4,100 8.85% - 2,041 4.41% 46,310
  Georgia 30,357 57.40% 8,197 15.50% 6,082 11.50% 2,010 3.80% 4,019 7.60% 100 0.19% 1,200 2.27% 300 0.57% - 621 1.17% 52,886
  Kentucky &   Tennessee 53,874 57.90% 9,305 10.00% 6,513 7.00% 4,838 5.20% 13,026 14.00% 1,200 1.29% 2,000 2.15% 500 0.54% - 1,790 1.92% 93,046
  Maine 57,664 60.00% 4,325 4.50% 7,689 8.00% 3,556 3.70% 1,249 1.30% 100 0.10% 1,200 1.25% - - 20,324 21.15% 96,107
  Maryland &   District of Columbia 134,579 64.50% 15,857 7.60% 12,102 5.80% 13,562 6.50% 24,412 11.70% 1,000 0.48% 2,500 1.20% 950 0.46% - 3,687 1.77% 208,649
  Massachusetts 306,013 82.00% 16,420 4.40% 9,703 2.60% 4,851 1.30% 1,120 0.30% 600 0.16% 3,000 0.80% 75 0.02% - 31,405 8.42% 373,187
  New Hampshire 86,078 61.00% 8,749 6.20% 6,491 4.60% 4,092 2.90% 564 0.40% 100 0.07% 1,000 0.71% - - 34,038 24.12% 141,112
  New Jersey 79,878 47.00% 13,087 7.70% 10,707 6.30% 5,439 3.20% 15,636 9.20% 28,250 16.62% 4,000 2.35% 6,650 3.91% - 6,307 3.71% 169,954
  New York 163,470 52.00% 22,006 7.00% 16,033 5.10% 9,431 3.00% 25,778 8.20% 55,000 17.50% 12,000 3.82% 1,500 0.48% - 9,148 2.91% 314,366
  North Carolina 190,860 66.00% 42,799 14.80% 16,483 5.70% 15,616 5.40% 13,592 4.70% 800 0.28% 4,800 1.66% 700 0.24% - 3,531 1.22% 289,181
  Pennsylvania 149,451 35.30% 36,410 8.60% 46,571 11.00% 14,818 3.50% 140,983 33.30% 7,500 1.77% 7,500 1.77% 3,325 0.79% - 16,815 3.97% 423,373
  Rhode Island 45,916 71.00% 3,751 5.80% 1,293 2.00% 517 0.80% 323 0.50% 250 0.39% 500 0.77% 50 0.08% - 12,070 18.66% 64,670
  South Carolina 84,387 60.20% 21,167 15.10% 13,177 9.40% 6,168 4.40% 7,009 5.00% 500 0.36% 5,500 3.92% 325 0.23% - 1,945 1.39% 140,178
  Vermont 64,655 76.00% 4,339 5.10% 2,722 3.20% 1,616 1.90% 170 0.20% 500 0.59% 350 0.41% - - 10,720 12.60% 85,072
  Virginia &   West Virginia 302,850 68.50% 45,096 10.20% 27,411 6.20% 24,316 5.50% 27,853 6.30% 1,500 0.34% 6,500 1.47% 2,600 0.59% - 3,991 0.90% 442,117
  1790 Census Area 1,933,416 60.94% 260,322 8.21% 190,075 5.99% 115,886 3.65% 276,940 8.73% 100,000 3.15% 54,900 1.73% 21,100 0.67% - 219,805 6.93% 3,172,444
  Northwest Territory 3,130 29.81% 428 4.08% 307 2.92% 190 1.81% 445 4.24% - 6,000 57.14% - - - 10,500
  French America 2,240 11.20% 305 1.53% 220 1.10% 135 0.68% 1,750 8.75% - 12,850 64.25% - 2,500 12.50% - 20,000
  Spanish America 610 2.54% 83 0.35% 60 0.25% 37 0.15% 85 0.35% - - - 23,125 96.35% - 24,000
  United States 1,939,396 60.10% 261,138 8.09% 190,662 5.91% 116,248 3.60% 279,220 8.65% 100,000 3.10% 73,750 2.29% 21,100 0.65% 25,625 0.79% 219,805 6.81% 3,226,944
  1. ^ and Welsh; ethnic Welsh people making up approximately 7-10% of settlers from England and Wales
  2. ^ and Finnish (including Forest Finns); ethnic Finns making up more than half of New Swedish colonial settlers[29]

Historians estimate that fewer than one million immigrants moved to the United States from Europe between 1600 and 1799.[30] By comparison, in the first federal census, in 1790, the population of the United States was enumerated to be 3,929,214.[31]

Early United States era

The Naturalization Act of 1790 limited naturalization to "free white persons"; it was expanded to include black people in the 1860s and Asian people in the 1950s.[32] This made the United States an outlier, since laws that made racial distinctions were uncommon in the world in the 18th century.[33]

In the early years of the United States, immigration (not counting the enslaved, who were treated as merchandise rather than people) was fewer than 8,000 people a year,[34] including French refugees from the slave revolt in Haiti. Legal importation of enslaved African was prohibited after 1808, though many were smuggled in to sell. After 1820, immigration gradually increased. From 1836 to 1914, over 30 million Europeans migrated to the United States.[35] The death rate on these transatlantic voyages was high, during which one in seven travelers died.[36]

 
Immigrants arriving at Ellis Island, 1902

After an initial wave of immigration from China following the California Gold Rush, Congress passed its first immigration law, the Page Act of 1875 which banned Chinese women.[37] This was followed by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882, banning virtually all immigration from China until the law's repeal in 1943. In the late 1800s, immigration from other Asian countries, especially to the West Coast, became more common.

Exclusion Era

The peak year of European immigration was in 1907, when 1,285,349 persons entered the country.[38] By 1910, 13.5 million immigrants were living in the United States.[39]

While the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 had already excluded immigrants from China, the immigration of people from Asian countries in addition to China was banned by the Immigration Act of 1917, also known as the Asiatic Barred Zone Act, which also banned homosexuals, people with intellectual disability, and people with an anarchist worldview.[40] The Emergency Quota Act was enacted in 1921, limiting immigration from the Eastern Hemisphere by national quotas equal to 3 percent of the number of foreign-born from each nation in the 1910 census. The temporary quota system was superseded by the National Origins Formula of the Immigration Act of 1924, which computed national quotas as a fraction of 150,000 in proportion to the national origins of the entire White American population as of the 1920 census, except those having origins in the nonquota countries of the Western Hemisphere (which remained unrestricted).[41][42]

While the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 had already excluded immigrants from China, the immigration of people from Asian countries in addition to China was banned by the Immigration Act of 1917, also known as the Asiatic Barred Zone Act, which also banned homosexuals, people with intellectual disability, and people with an anarchist worldview.[40] The Emergency Quota Act was enacted in 1921, followed by the Immigration Act of 1924. The 1924 Act was aimed at further restricting immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe, particularly Italian, Slavic, and Jewish people, who had begun to enter the country in large numbers beginning in the 1890s.[43] The 1924 Act also consolidated the prohibition of Asian immigration.[44]

Origins of immigrant stock in 1920

The National Origins Formula was a unique computation which attempted to measure the total contributions of "blood" from each national origin as a share of the total stock of White Americans in 1920, counting immigrants, children of immigrants, and the grandchildren of immigrants (and later generations), in addition to estimating the colonial stock population descended from the population who had immigrated in the colonial period and were enumerated in the 1790 census. European Americans remained predominant, although there were shifts toward Southern, Central, and Eastern Europe from immigration in the period 1790 to 1920. The restrictive immigration quota system established by the Immigration Act of 1924, revised and re-affirmed by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, sought to preserve this demographic makeup of America by allotting quotas in proportion to how much blood each national origin had contributed to the total stock of the population in 1920, as presented below:[28]

 
The White Population of the United States in 1920, apportioned according to the National Origins Formula prescribed by §11(c) of the Immigration Act of 1924. About 56.5% of White Americans were deemed to be of postcolonial immigrant stock as of 1920, while 43.5% were deemed colonial stock. Consequent immigration quotas in effect until 1965 were based upon these calculations.[45]
 
European Americans in 1790 by nationality, estimated by classification of family names, according to a 1909 preliminary estimate in Census Bureau report A Century of Population Growth (top half) and revised figures according to a scientific study by the Census Bureau in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies commissioned in the 1920s (bottom half).[26][27]
Country of origin Total Colonial stock Postcolonial stock
Total Immigrants Children of Grandchildren of
# % # % # % # % # % # %
  Austria 843,051 0.89% 14,110 0.03% 828,951 1.55% 305,657 2.23% 414,794 2.16% 108,500 0.53%
  Belgium 778,328 0.82% 602,300 1.46% 176,028 0.33% 62,686 0.46% 62,042 0.32% 51,300 0.25%
  Czechoslovakia 1,715,128 1.81% 54,700 0.13% 1,660,428 3.10% 559,895 4.08% 903,933 4.71% 196,600 0.95%
  Denmark 704,783 0.74% 93,200 0.23% 611,583 1.14% 189,934 1.39% 277,149 1.44% 144,500 0.70%
  Estonia 69,013 0.07% - 69,013 0.13% 33,612 0.25% 28,001 0.15% 7,400 0.04%
  Finland 339,436 0.36% 4,300 0.01% 335,136 0.63% 149,824 1.09% 146,612 0.76% 38,700 0.19%
  France 1,841,689 1.94% 767,100 1.86% 1,074,589 2.01% 155,019 1.13% 325,270 1.69% 594,300 2.88%
  Germany 15,488,615 16.33% 3,036,800 7.36% 12,451,815 23.26% 1,672,375 12.20% 4,051,240 21.11% 6,728,200 32.61%
  Greece 182,936 0.19% - 182,936 0.34% 135,146 0.99% 46,890 0.24% 900 0.00%
  Hungary 518,750 0.55% - 518,750 0.97% 318,977 2.33% 183,773 0.96% 16,000 0.08%
  Ireland 10,653,334 11.24% 1,821,500 4.41% 8,831,834 16.50% 820,970 5.99% 2,097,664 10.93% 5,913,200 28.66%
  Italy 3,462,271 3.65% - 3,462,271 6.47% 1,612,281 11.76% 1,671,490 8.71% 178,500 0.87%
  Latvia 140,777 0.15% - 140,777 0.26% 69,277 0.51% 56,000 0.29% 15,500 0.08%
  Lithuania 230,445 0.24% - 230,445 0.43% 117,000 0.85% 88,645 0.46% 24,800 0.12%
  Netherlands 1,881,359 1.98% 1,366,800 3.31% 514,559 0.96% 133,478 0.97% 205,381 1.07% 175,700 0.85%
  Norway 1,418,592 1.50% 75,200 0.18% 1,343,392 2.51% 363,862 2.65% 597,130 3.11% 382,400 1.85%
  Poland 3,892,796 4.11% 8,600 0.02% 3,884,196 7.26% 1,814,426 13.23% 1,779,570 9.27% 290,200 1.41%
  Portugal 262,804 0.28% 23,700 0.06% 239,104 0.45% 104,088 0.76% 105,416 0.55% 29,600 0.14%
  Romania 175,697 0.19% - 175,697 0.33% 88,942 0.65% 83,755 0.44% 3,000 0.02%
  Russia 1,660,954 1.75% 4,300 0.01% 1,656,654 3.09% 767,324 5.60% 762,130 3.97% 127,200 0.62%
  Spain 150,258 0.16% 38,400 0.09% 111,858 0.21% 50,027 0.36% 24,531 0.13% 37,300 0.18%
  Sweden 1,977,234 2.09% 217,100 0.53% 1,760,134 3.29% 625,580 4.56% 774,854 4.04% 359,700 1.74%
  Switzerland 1,018,706 1.07% 388,900 0.94% 629,806 1.18% 118,659 0.87% 203,547 1.06% 307,600 1.49%
  Syria &  Leb. 73,442 0.08% - 73,442 0.14% 42,039 0.31% 31,403 0.16% -
  Turkey 134,756 0.14% - 134,756 0.25% 102,669 0.75% 31,487 0.16% 600 0.00%
  United Kingdom 39,216,333 41.36% 31,803,900 77.02% 7,412,433 13.85% 1,365,314 9.96% 2,308,419 12.03% 3,738,700 18.12%
  Yugoslavia 504,203 0.53% - 504,203 0.94% 220,668 1.61% 265,735 1.38% 17,800 0.09%
Other Countries 170,868 0.18% 3,500 0.01% 167,368 0.31% 71,553 0.52% 93,815 0.49% 2,000 0.01%
All Quota Countries 89,506,558 100.00% 40,324,400 45.05% 49,182,158 54.95% 12,071,282 13.49% 17,620,676 19.69% 19,490,200 21.78%
Nonquota Countries 5,314,357 5.60% 964,170 2.34% 4,350,187 8.13% 1,641,472 11.97% 1,569,696 8.18% 1,139,019 5.52%
1920   USA Total 94,820,915 100.00% 41,288,570 43.54% 53,532,345 56.46% 13,712,754 14.46% 19,190,372 20.24% 20,629,219 21.76%
 
Polish immigrants working on the farm, 1909. The welfare system was practically non-existent before the 1930s and the economic pressures on the poor were giving rise to child labor.

Immigration patterns of the 1930s were affected by the Great Depression. In the final prosperous year, 1929, there were 279,678 immigrants recorded,[46] but in 1933, only 23,068 moved to the U.S.[30] In the early 1930s, more people emigrated from the United States than to it.[47] The U.S. government sponsored a Mexican Repatriation program which was intended to encourage people to voluntarily move to Mexico, but thousands were deported against their will.[48] Altogether, approximately 400,000 Mexicans were repatriated; half of them were US citizens.[49] Most of the Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazis and World War II were barred from coming to the United States.[50] In the post-war era, the Justice Department launched Operation Wetback, under which 1,075,168 Mexicans were deported in 1954.[51]

Since 1965

 
Immigrant trunks. Left, from Sweden, late 19th century. Right, from Refugee camp in Thailand, 1993.

The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, also known as the Hart-Cellar Act, abolished the system of national-origin quotas. By equalizing immigration policies, the act resulted in new immigration from non-European nations, which changed the ethnic demographics of the United States.[52] In 1970, 60% of immigrants were from Europe; this decreased to 15% by 2000.[53] In 1990, George H. W. Bush signed the Immigration Act of 1990,[54] which increased legal immigration to the United States by 40%.[55] In 1991, Bush signed the Armed Forces Immigration Adjustment Act 1991, allowing foreign service members who had served 12 or more years in the US Armed Forces to qualify for permanent residency and, in some cases, citizenship.

In November 1994, California voters passed Proposition 187 amending the state constitution, denying state financial aid to illegal immigrants. The federal courts voided this change, ruling that it violated the federal constitution.[56]

Appointed by Bill Clinton,[57] the U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform recommended reducing legal immigration from about 800,000 people per year to approximately 550,000.[58] While an influx of new residents from different cultures presents some challenges, "the United States has always been energized by its immigrant populations", said President Bill Clinton in 1998. "America has constantly drawn strength and spirit from wave after wave of immigrants ... They have proved to be the most restless, the most adventurous, the most innovative, the most industrious of people."[59]

 
Boston Chinatown, Massachusetts, 2008.

In 2001, President George W. Bush discussed an accord with Mexican President Vincente Fox. Due to the September 11 attacks, the possible accord did not occur. From 2005 to 2013, the US Congress discussed various ways of controlling immigration. The Senate and House were unable to reach an agreement.[56]

Nearly 14 million immigrants entered the United States from 2000 to 2010,[60] and over one million persons were naturalized as U.S. citizens in 2008. The per-country limit[8] applies the same maximum on the number of visas to all countries regardless of their population and has therefore had the effect of significantly restricting immigration of persons born in populous nations such as Mexico, China, India, and the Philippines—the leading countries of origin for legally admitted immigrants to the United States in 2013;[61] nevertheless, China, India, and Mexico were the leading countries of origin for immigrants overall to the United States in 2013, regardless of legal status, according to a U.S. Census Bureau study.[62]

Nearly 8 million people immigrated to the United States from 2000 to 2005; 3.7 million of them entered without papers.[63][64] In 1986 president Ronald Reagan signed immigration reform that gave amnesty to 3 million undocumented immigrants in the country.[65] Hispanic immigrants suffered job losses during the late-2000s recession,[66] but since the recession's end in June 2009, immigrants posted a net gain of 656,000 jobs.[67] Over 1 million immigrants were granted legal residence in 2011.[68]

For those who enter the US illegally across the Mexico–United States border and elsewhere, migration is difficult, expensive and dangerous.[69] Virtually all undocumented immigrants have no avenues for legal entry to the United States due to the restrictive legal limits on green cards, and lack of immigrant visas for low-skilled workers.[70] Participants in debates on immigration in the early 21st century called for increasing enforcement of existing laws governing illegal immigration to the United States, building a barrier along some or all of the 2,000-mile (3,200 km) Mexico-U.S. border, or creating a new guest worker program. Through much of 2006 the country and Congress was engaged in a debate about these proposals. As of April 2010 few of these proposals had become law, though a partial border fence had been approved and subsequently canceled.[71]

Modern reform attempts

Beginning with Ronald Reagan in the 1980s, presidents from both political parties have steadily increased the number of border patrol agents and instituted harsher punitive measures for immigration violations. Examples of these policies include Ronald Reagan's Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 and the Clinton-era Prevention Through Deterrence strategy. The sociologist Douglas Massey has argued that these policies have succeeded at producing a perception of border enforcement but have largely failed at preventing emigration from Latin America. Notably, rather than curtailing illegal immigration, the increase in border patrol agents decreased circular migration across the U.S.–Mexico border, thus increasing the population of Hispanics in the U.S.[72]

Presidents from both parties have employed anti-immigrant rhetoric to appeal to their political base or to garner bi-partisan support for their policies. While Republicans like Reagan and Donald Trump have led the way in framing Hispanic immigrants as criminals, Douglas Massey points out that "the current moment of open racism and xenophobia could not have happened with Democratic acquiescence".[73] For example, while lobbying for his 1986 immigration bill, Reagan framed unauthorized immigration as a "national security" issue and warned that "terrorists and subversives are just two days' driving time" from the border.[73] Later presidents, including Democrats Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, used similar "security" rhetoric in their efforts to court Republican support for comprehensive immigration reform. In his 2013 State of the Union Address, Obama said "real reform means strong border security, and we can build on the progress my administration has already made – putting more boots on the southern border than at any time in our history".[74]

Trump administration policies

ICE reports that it removed 240,255 immigrants in fiscal year 2016, as well as 226,119 in FY2017 and 256,085 in FY2018. Citizens of Central American countries (including Mexico) made up over 90% of removals in FY2017 and over 80% in FY2018.[75]

In January 2017, U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive order temporarily suspending entry to the United States by nationals of seven Muslim-majority countries. It was replaced by another executive order in March 2017 and by a presidential proclamation in September 2017, with various changes to the list of countries and exemptions.[76] The orders were temporarily suspended by federal courts but later allowed to proceed by the Supreme Court, pending a definite ruling on their legality.[77] Another executive order called for the immediate construction of a wall across the U.S.–Mexico border, the hiring of 5,000 new border patrol agents and 10,000 new immigration officers, and federal funding penalties for sanctuary cities.[78]

The "zero-tolerance" policy was put in place in 2018, which legally allows children to be separated from adults unlawfully entering the United States. This is justified by labeling all adults that enter unlawfully as criminals, thus subjecting them to criminal prosecution.[79] The Trump Administration also argued that its policy had precedent under the Obama Administration, which had opened family detention centers in response to migrants increasingly using children as a way to get adults into the country. However, the Obama Administration detained families together in administrative, rather than criminal, detention.[80][81]

Other policies focused on what it means for an asylum seeker to claim credible fear.[82] To further decrease the amount of asylum seekers into the United States, Attorney General Jeff Sessions released a decision that restricts those fleeing gang violence and domestic abuse as "private crime", therefore making their claims ineligible for asylum.[83] These new policies that have been put in place are putting many lives at risk, to the point that the ACLU has officially sued Jeff Sessions along with other members of the Trump Administration. The ACLU claims that the policies that are currently being put in place by this Presidential Administration is undermining the fundamental human rights of those immigrating into the United States, specifically women. They also claim that these policies violate decades of settle asylum law.[84]

In April 2020, President Trump said he will sign an executive order to temporarily suspend immigration to the United States because of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.[85][86]

Biden administration policies

In January 2023, regarding the southern border crisis, Joe Biden announced a new immigration policy that would allow 30,000 migrants per month from Cuba, Haiti, Nicaragua and Venezuela[87] but will also expel the migrants from those countries who violate US laws of immigration.[88] The policy has faced criticism from "immigration reform advocates and lawyers who decry any expansion of Title 42."[87]

Origins of the U.S. immigrant population, 1960–2016

% of foreign-born population residing in the U.S. who were born in ...[89]
1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2018
Europe-Canada 84% 68% 42% 26% 19% 15% 15% 14% 14% 14% 14% 13% 13%
South and East Asia 4% 7% 15% 22% 23% 25% 25% 26% 26% 26% 27% 27% 28%
Other Latin America 4% 11% 16% 21% 22% 24% 24% 24% 24% 24% 24% 25% 25%
Mexico 6% 8% 16% 22% 29% 29% 29% 28% 28% 28% 27% 26% 25%

Note: "Other Latin America" includes Central America, South America and the Caribbean.

Persons obtaining legal permanent resident status by fiscal year[90][91][92][93]
Year Year Year Year Year Year Year Year
1890 455,302 1910 1,041,570 1930 241,700 1950 249,187 1970 373,326 1990 1,535,872 2010 1,042,625 2018 1,096,611
1895 258,536 1915 326,700 1935 34,956 1955 237,790 1975 385,378 1995 720,177 2015 1,051,031 2019 1,031,765
1900 448,572 1920 430,001 1940 70,756 1960 265,398 1980 524,295 2000 841,002 2016 1,183,505 2020 707,362
1905 1,026,499 1925 294,314 1945 38,119 1965 296,697 1985 568,149 2005 1,122,257 2017 1,127,167 2021 740,002
Decade Average per year
1890–99 369,100
1900–09 745,100
1910–19 634,400
1920–29 429,600
1930–39 69,900
1940–49 85,700
1950–59 249,900
1960–69 321,400
1970–79 424,800
1980–89 624,400
1990–99 977,500
2000–09 1,029,900
2010–19 1,063,300
Refugee numbers
 
Operation Allies Refuge: Afghans being evacuated on a US Air Force Boeing C-17 plane during the Fall of Kabul (2021)

According to the Department of State, in the 2016 fiscal year 84,988 refugees were accepted into the US from around the world. In the fiscal year of 2017, 53,691 refugees were accepted to the US. There was a significant decrease after Trump took office; it continued in the fiscal year of 2018 when only 22,405 refugees were accepted into the US. This displays a massive drop in acceptance of refugees since the Trump Administration has been in place.[94][original research?]

On September 26, 2019, The Trump administration announced it plans to allow only 18,000 refugees to resettle in the United States in the 2020 fiscal year, its lowest level since the modern program began in 1980.[95][96][97][98]

In 2020 The Trump administration announces that it plans to slash refugee admissions to U.S. for 2021 to a record low, 15,000 refugees down from a cap of 18,000 for 2020. This is the fourth consecutive year of declining refugee admissions under the Trump term.[99][100][101]

Period Refugee Program
[102][103][99][100][101]
2018 45,000
2019 30,000
2020 18,000
2021 15,000

Contemporary immigration

 
Naturalization ceremony, Salem, Massachusetts, 2007

As of 2018, approximately half of immigrants living in the United States are from Mexico and other Latin American countries.[104] Many Central Americans are fleeing because of desperate social and economic circumstances in their countries. Some believe that the large number of Central American refugees arriving in the United States can be explained as a "blowback" to policies such as United States military interventions and covert operations that installed or maintained in power authoritarian leaders allied with wealthy land owners and multinational corporations who stop family farming and democratic efforts, which have caused drastically sharp social inequality, wide-scale poverty and rampant crime.[105] Economic austerity dictated by neoliberal policies imposed by the International Monetary Fund and its ally, the U.S., has also been cited as a driver of the dire social and economic conditions, as has the U.S. "War on Drugs", which has been understood as fueling murderous gang violence in the region.[106] Another major migration driver from Central America (Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador) are crop failures, which are (partly) caused by climate change.[107][108][109][110] "The current debate ... is almost totally about what to do about immigrants when they get here. But the 800-pound gorilla that's missing from the table is what we have been doing there that brings them here, that drives them here", according to Jeff Faux, an economist who is a distinguished fellow at the Economic Policy Institute.

Until the 1930s most legal immigrants were male. By the 1990s women accounted for just over half of all legal immigrants.[111] Contemporary immigrants tend to be younger than the native population of the United States, with people between the ages of 15 and 34 substantially overrepresented.[112] Immigrants are also more likely to be married and less likely to be divorced than native-born Americans of the same age.[113]

Immigrants are likely to move to and live in areas populated by people with similar backgrounds. This phenomenon has remained true throughout the history of immigration to the United States.[114] Seven out of ten immigrants surveyed by Public Agenda in 2009 said they intended to make the U.S. their permanent home, and 71% said if they could do it over again they would still come to the US. In the same study, 76% of immigrants say the government has become stricter on enforcing immigration laws since the September 11, 2001 attacks ("9/11"), and 24% report that they personally have experienced some or a great deal of discrimination.[115]

Public attitudes about immigration in the U.S. were heavily influenced in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks. After the attacks, 52% of Americans believed that immigration was a good thing overall for the U.S., down from 62% the year before, according to a 2009 Gallup poll.[116] A 2008 Public Agenda survey found that half of Americans said tighter controls on immigration would do "a great deal" to enhance U.S. national security.[117] Harvard political scientist and historian Samuel P. Huntington argued in his 2004 book Who Are We? The Challenges to America's National Identity that a potential future consequence of continuing massive immigration from Latin America, especially Mexico, could lead to the bifurcation of the United States.[118][119]

The estimated population of illegal Mexican immigrants in the US decreased from approximately 7 million in 2007 to 6.1 million in 2011[120] Commentators link the reversal of the immigration trend to the economic downturn that started in 2008 and which meant fewer available jobs, and to the introduction of tough immigration laws in many states.[121][122][123][124] According to the Pew Hispanic Center, the net immigration of Mexican born persons had stagnated in 2010, and tended toward going into negative figures.[125]

More than 80 cities in the United States,[126] including Washington D.C., New York City, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, San Diego, San Jose, Salt Lake City, Phoenix, Dallas, Fort Worth, Houston, Detroit, Jersey City, Minneapolis, Denver, Baltimore, Seattle, Portland, Oregon and Portland, Maine, have sanctuary policies, which vary locally.[127]

Origin countries


Inflow of New Legal Permanent Residents by region, 2015–2020
Region 2015 % of total 2016 % of total 2017 % of total 2018[91] % of total 2019[92] % of total 2020[93] % of total  / % in 2020
Americas 438,435 41.7% 506,901 42.8% 492,726 43.7% 497,860 45.4% 461,710 44.8% 284,491 40.2%  38.4%
Asia 419,297 39.9% 462,299 39.1% 424,743 37.7% 397,187 36.2% 364,761 35.4% 272,597 38.5%  25.3%
Africa 101,415 9.7% 113,426 9.6% 118,824 10.5% 115,736 10.6% 111,194 10.8% 76,649 10.8%  31.1%
Europe 85,803 8.2% 93,567 7.9% 84,335 7.5% 80,024 7.3% 87,597 8.5% 68,994 9.8%  21.2%
Australia and Oceania 5,404 0.5% 5,588 0.5% 5,071 0.5% 4,653 0.4% 5,359 0.5% 3,998 0.6%  25.4%
Unknown 677 0.1% 1,724 0.1% 1,468 0.1% 1,151 0.1% 1,144 0.1% 633 >0.1%  
Total 1,051,031 100% 1,183,505 100% 1,127,167 100% 1,096,611 100% 1,031,765 100% 707,632 100%  31.4%

Source: US Department of Homeland Security, Office of Immigration Statistics[128][129][130][131]

Top 15 sending countries, 2015–2021:[132]
Country 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021
  Mexico 158,619 174,534 170,581 161,858 156,052 100,325 107,230
  India 64,116 64,687 60,394 59,821 54,495 46,363 93,450
  China 74,558 81,772 71,565 65,214 62,248 41,483 49,847
  Philippines 56,478 53,287 49,147 47,258 45,920 25,491 27,511
  Dominican Republic 50,610 61,161 58,520 57,413 49,911 30,005 24,553
  Cuba 54,396 66,516 65,028 76,486 41,641 16,367 23,077
  El Salvador 19,487 23,449 25,109 28,326 27,656 17,907 18,668
  Brazil 11,424 13,812 14,989 15,394 19,825 16,746 18,351
  Vietnam 30,832 41,451 38,231 33,834 39,712 29,995 16,312
  Colombia 17,316 18,610 17,956 17,545 19,841 11,989 15,293
  Venezuela 9,144 10,772 11,809 11,762 15,720 12,136 14,412
  Jamaica 17,642 23,350 21,905 20,347 21,689 12,826 13,357
  Nigeria 11,542 14,380 13,539 13,952 15,888 12,398 13,100
  South Korea 17,138 21,801 19,194 17,676 18,479 16,244 12,351
  Haiti 16,967 23,584 21,824 21,360 17,253 9,338 11,456
Total 1,051,031 1,183,505 1,127,167 1,096,611 1,031,765 707,362 740,002

Charts

Inflow of New Legal Permanent Residents by continent in 2020:[93]

  Americas (40.2%)
  Asia (38.5%)
  Africa (10.8%)
  Europe (9.8%)
  Unknown (0.1%)

Languages spoken among U.S. immigrants, 2016:[89]

  English only (16%)
  Spanish (43%)
  Chinese (6%)
  Hindi and related languages (5%)
  French (3%)
  Vietnamese (3%)
  Arabic (2%)
  Other (18%)

Demography

Extent and destinations

 
Little Italy in New York, ca.1900
 
Crowd at the Philippine Independence Day Parade in New York City
 
Galveston Immigration Stations
Year[133] Number of
foreign-born
Percent
foreign-born
1850 2,244,602 9.7
1860 4,138,697 13.2
1870 5,567,229 14.4
1880 6,679,943 13.3
1890 9,249,547 14.8
1900 10,341,276 13.6
1910 13,515,886 14.7
1920 13,920,692 13.2
1930 14,204,149 11.6
1940 11,594,896 8.8
1950 10,347,395 6.9
1960 9,738,091 5.4
1970 9,619,302 4.7
1980 14,079,906 6.2
1990 19,767,316 7.9
2000 31,107,889 11.1
2010 39,956,000 12.9
2017 44,525,500 13.7
2018 44,728,502 13.5
2019 44,932,799

The United States admitted more legal immigrants from 1991 to 2000, between ten and eleven million, than in any previous decade. In the most recent decade,[when?] the 10 million legal immigrants that settled in the U.S. represent roughly one third of the annual growth, as the U.S. population increased by 32 million (from 249 million to 281 million). By comparison, the highest previous decade was the 1900s, when 8.8 million people arrived, increasing the total U.S. population by one percent every year. Specifically, "nearly 15% of Americans were foreign-born in 1910, while in 1999, only about 10% were foreign-born".[138]

By 1970, immigrants accounted for 4.7 percent of the US population and rising to 6.2 percent in 1980, with an estimated 12.5 percent in 2009.[139] As of 2010, 25% of US residents under age 18 were first- or second-generation immigrants.[140] Eight percent of all babies born in the U.S. in 2008 belonged to illegal immigrant parents, according to a recent[when?] analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data by the Pew Hispanic Center.[141]

Legal immigration to the U.S. increased from 250,000 in the 1930s, to 2.5 million in the 1950s, to 4.5 million in the 1970s, and to 7.3 million in the 1980s, before becoming stable at about 10 million in the 1990s.[142] Since 2000, legal immigrants to the United States number approximately 1,000,000 per year, of whom about 600,000 are Change of Status who already are in the U.S. Legal immigrants to the United States now[when?] are at their highest level ever, at just over 37,000,000 legal immigrants. In reports in 2005–2006, estimates of illegal immigration ranged from 700,000 to 1,500,000 per year.[143][144] Immigration led to a 57.4% increase in foreign-born population from 1990 to 2000.[145]

Foreign-born immigration has caused the U.S. population to continue its rapid increase with the foreign-born population doubling from almost 20 million in 1990 to over 47 million in 2015.[146] In 2018, there were almost 90 million immigrants and U.S.-born children of immigrants (second-generation Americans) in the United States, accounting for 28% of the overall U.S. population.[147]

While immigration has increased drastically over the 20th century, the foreign-born share of the population is, at 13.4, only somewhat below what it was at its peak in 1910 at 14.7%. A number of factors may be attributed to the decrease in the representation of foreign-born residents in the United States. Most significant has been the change in the composition of immigrants; prior to 1890, 82% of immigrants came from North and Western Europe. From 1891 to 1920, that number decreased to 25%, with a rise in immigrants from East, Central, and South Europe, summing up to 64%. Animosity towards these different and foreign immigrants increased in the United States, resulting in much legislation to limit immigration.[citation needed]

Contemporary immigrants settle predominantly in seven states, California, New York, Florida, Texas, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Illinois, comprising about 44% of the U.S. population as a whole. The combined total immigrant population of these seven states was 70% of the total foreign-born population in 2000.

Origin

Country of birth for foreign-born population in the United States (1970–2015)
Country of birth 2015[note 1] 2010[note 2] 2000[150] 1990[151] 1980[152] 1970[152]
  Mexico   11,513,528   11,599,653   9,177,487   4,298,014   2,199,221 759,711
  India   2,348,687   1,837,838   1,022,552   450,406   206,087 51,000
  China[a]   2,034,383   1,583,634   988,857   529,837   286,120 172,132
  Philippines   1,945,345   1,810,537   1,369,070   912,674   501,440 184,842
  El Salvador   1,323,592   1,201,972   817,336 465,433 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Vietnam   1,314,927   1,231,716   988,174   543,262 231,120 N/A[b]
  Cuba   1,227,031   1,057,346   872,716   736,971   607,184 439,048
  South Korea[c]   1,064,960   1,085,151   864,125   568,397   289,885 38,711
  Dominican Republic   1,057,439   866,618   687,677   347,858   169,147 61,228
  Guatemala   923,562   822,947   480,665 225,739 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Canada   818,441   808,772   820,771   744,830   842,859 812,421
  Jamaica   727,634   671,197   553,827   334,140   196,811 68,576
  Colombia   723,561   648,594   509,872 286,124 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  United Kingdom[d]   696,048   685,938   677,751   640,145   669,149 686,099
  Haiti   643,341   572,896   419,317 225,393 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Honduras   603,179   502,827   282,852 108,923 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Germany   577,282   617,070   706,704   711,929   849,384 832,965
  Peru   447,223   419,363   278,186 144,199 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Ecuador   437,581   428,747   298,626 143,314 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Poland   422,208   450,537   466,742   388,328   418,128 548,107
  Russia   391,974   391,101   340,177   333,725   406,022 463,462
  Iran   377,741   353,169   283,226 210,941 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Taiwan   376,666   365,981   326,215 244,102 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Brazil   373,058   332,250   212,428 82,489 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Pakistan   371,400   301,280   223,477 91,889 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Italy   348,216   368,699   473,338   580,592   831,922 1,008,533
  Japan   346,887   334,449   347,539   290,128   221,794 120,235
  Ukraine   344,565   324,216 275,153 N/A[e] N/A[e] N/A[e]
  Nigeria   298,532   221,077   134,940 55,350 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Guyana   274,118   257,272   211,189 120,698 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Venezuela   265,282   182,342   107,031 42,119 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Nicaragua   252,196   250,186   220,335 168,659 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Thailand   247,614   224,576   169,801 106,919 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Trinidad and Tobago   234,483   231,678   197,398 115,710 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Hong Kong   228,316   216,948   203,580 147,131 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Ethiopia   226,159   164,046   69,531 34,805 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Bangladesh   221,275   166,513 95,294 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Iraq   212,608   148,673   89,892 44,916 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Laos   188,385   192,469   204,284 171,577 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Argentina   187,052   170,120   125,218 92,563 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Egypt[f]   179,157   143,086   113,396 66,313 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Portugal   175,555   186,142   203,119   210,122   177,437 91,034
  France[g]   175,198   157,577   151,154   119,233   120,215 105,385
  Cambodia   159,827   156,508   136,978 118,833 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Ghana   158,999   120,785   65,572 20,889 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Romania   158,033   163,431   135,966 91,106 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Myanmar   137,190 89,553 N/A[b] 19,835 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Greece   134,654   136,914   165,750   177,398   210,998 177,275
  Israel[h]   134,172   133,074   109,719 86,048 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Kenya   126,209 95,126 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Ireland   124,411   128,496   156,474   169,827   197,817 251,375
  Lebanon   120,620   119,523   105,910   86,369 N/A[b] N/A[b]
    Nepal   119,640 63,948 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Turkey   113,937   102,242   78,378 55,087 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Spain   109,712   86,683   82,858 76,415 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Bosnia and Herzegovina   105,657   115,600 98,766 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Panama   103,715   104,080   105,177 85,737 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  South Africa   99,323   83,298   63,558 34,707 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Chile   97,391   92,948   80,804 55,681 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Indonesia   96,158   92,555   72,552 48,387 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Somalia 92,807 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Saudi Arabia   90,836 48,916 N/A[b] 12,632 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Syria[i]   88,226   64,240   54,561 36,782 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Armenia   86,727   80,972 65,280 N/A[e] N/A[e] N/A[e] N/A[e]
  Australia   86,447   74,478   60,965 42,267 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Costa Rica   86,186   83,034   71,870 43,350 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Albania   85,406 77,091 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Netherlands[j]   84,579   85,096   94,570   96,198   103,136 110,570
  Liberia   83,221 71,062 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Afghanistan   79,298   60,314   45,195 28,444 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Morocco[k]   74,009 58,728 N/A[b] 15,541 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Malaysia   72,878   58,095   49,459 33,834 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Jordan[l]   72,662   60,912   46,794 31,871 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Bulgaria   68,658 61,931 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Hungary   67,594   75,479   92,017   110,337   144,368 183,236
Former   Czechoslovakia   67,241   70,283   83,031   87,020   112,707 160,899
  Belarus   59,501   54,575 38,503 N/A[e] N/A[e] N/A[e]
  Uzbekistan   56,275 47,664 N/A[b] N/A[e] N/A[e] N/A[e]
  Barbados   54,131   51,764   52,172 43,015 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Sri Lanka   50,819 43,568 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Cameroon 50,646 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Belize   49,432 46,717 N/A[b] 29,957 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Uruguay 47,933 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Yemen   47,664 38,627 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Sweden   47,190   45,856   49,724   53,676   77,157 127,070
  Austria   46,167   49,465   63,648   87,673   145,607 214,014
  Fiji   45,354 39,921 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Moldova   42,388 34,081 N/A[b] N/A[e] N/A[e] N/A[e]
  Sudan   41,081 40,740 N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Cape Verde 39,836 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Switzerland 39,203 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Croatia 38,854 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Eritrea 38,657 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Sierra Leone 38,257 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Serbia 36,244 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Belgium 35,077 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Lithuania 34,334 N/A[e] N/A[e]
  Grenada 34,041 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Bahamas 32,962 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Singapore 32,748 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Dominica 31,007 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Kuwait 30,522 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Denmark   29,045 29,964 N/A[b] 34,999 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Kazakhstan 28,512 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Azores 26,022 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  Norway   24,583 26,207 N/A[b] 42,240 N/A[b] N/A[b]
  North Macedonia 24,529 N/A[b] N/A[b]
immigration, united, states, been, suggested, that, this, article, should, split, into, articles, titled, demographics, immigration, united, states, public, opinion, immigration, united, states, discuss, july, 2021, immigration, been, major, source, population. It has been suggested that this article should be split into articles titled Demographics of immigration to the United States and Public opinion of immigration to the United States discuss July 2021 Immigration has been a major source of population growth and cultural change throughout much of the history of the United States In absolute numbers the United States has by far the highest number of immigrant population in the world with 50 661 149 people as of 2019 1 2 This represents 19 1 of the 244 million international migrants worldwide and 14 4 of the United States population In 2018 there were almost 90 million immigrants and U S born children of immigrants in the United States accounting for 28 of the overall U S population 3 Naturalization ceremony at Oakton High School in Fairfax County Virginia December 2015 Immigrants to the United States take the Oath of Allegiance at a naturalization ceremony at the Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona September 2010 Population growth rate with and without migration in the U S According to the 2016 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics the United States admitted a total of 1 18 million legal immigrants 618k new arrivals 565k status adjustments in 2016 4 Of these 48 were the immediate relatives of United States citizens 20 were family sponsored 13 were refugees or asylum seekers 12 were employment based preferences 4 2 were part of the Diversity Immigrant Visa program 1 4 were victims of a crime U1 or their family members were U2 to U5 5 and 1 0 who were granted the Special Immigrant Visa SIV for Iraqis and Afghans employed by the United States Government 4 The remaining 0 4 included small numbers from several other categories including 0 2 who were granted suspension of deportation as an immediate relative of a citizen Z13 6 persons admitted under the Nicaraguan and Central American Relief Act children born after the issuance of a parent s visa and certain parolees from the former Soviet Union Cambodia Laos and Vietnam who were denied refugee status 4 Between 1921 and 1965 policies such as the national origins formula limited immigration and naturalization opportunities for people from areas outside Western Europe Exclusion laws enacted as early as the 1880s generally prohibited or severely restricted immigration from Asia and quota laws enacted in the 1920s curtailed Southern and Eastern European immigration The civil rights movement led to the replacement 7 of these ethnic quotas with per country limits for family sponsored and employment based preference visas 8 Since then the number of first generation immigrants living in the United States has quadrupled 9 10 The total immigrant population has stalled in recent years especially since the election of Donald Trump and the COVID 19 pandemic Census estimates show 45 3 million foreign born residents in March 2018 and 45 4 million in September 2021 the lowest 3 year increase in decades 11 In 2017 out of the U S foreign born population some 45 20 7 million were naturalized citizens 27 12 3 million were lawful permanent residents 6 2 2 million were temporary lawful residents and 23 10 5 million were unauthorized immigrants 12 The United States led the world in refugee resettlement for decades admitting more refugees than the rest of the world combined 13 Research suggests that immigration is beneficial to the United States economy With few exceptions the evidence suggests that on average immigration has positive economic effects on the native population but it is mixed as to whether low skilled immigration adversely affects low skilled natives Studies also show that immigrants have lower crime rates than natives in the United States 14 15 16 The economic social and political aspects of immigration have caused controversy regarding such issues as maintaining ethnic homogeneity workers for employers versus jobs for non immigrants settlement patterns impact on upward social mobility crime and voting behavior Contents 1 History 1 1 Colonial period 1 2 Origins of immigrant stock in 1790 1 3 Early United States era 1 4 Exclusion Era 1 5 Origins of immigrant stock in 1920 1 6 Since 1965 1 7 Modern reform attempts 1 7 1 Trump administration policies 1 7 2 Biden administration policies 1 8 Origins of the U S immigrant population 1960 2016 2 Contemporary immigration 2 1 Origin countries 2 2 Charts 3 Demography 3 1 Extent and destinations 3 2 Origin 4 Effects of immigration 4 1 Economic effects 5 Public opinion 5 1 Religious responses 6 Legal issues 7 Immigration in popular culture 7 1 Immigration in literature 8 Documentary films 9 Overall approach to regulation 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Further reading 13 1 Surveys 13 2 Before 1920 13 3 Recent post 1965 14 External links 14 1 History 14 2 Immigration policy 14 3 Current immigration 14 4 Economic impactHistoryMain article History of immigration to the United States Immigrants on ocean steamer passing the Statue of Liberty New York City 1887 American immigration history can be viewed in four epochs the colonial period the mid 19th century the start of the 20th century and post 1965 Each period brought distinct national groups races and ethnicities to the United States Colonial period During the 17th century approximately 400 000 English people migrated to America under European colonization 17 They comprised 83 5 of the white population at the time of the first census in 1790 18 From 1700 to 1775 between 350 000 and 500 000 Europeans immigrated estimates vary in sources Regarding English settlers of the 18th century one source says 52 000 English migrated during the period of 1701 to 1775 although this figure is likely too low 19 20 400 000 450 000 of the 18th century migrants were Scots Scots Irish from Ulster Germans Swiss and French Huguenots 21 Over half of all European immigrants to Colonial America during the 17th and 18th centuries arrived as indentured servants 22 They numbered 350 000 23 From 1770 to 1775 the latter year being when the American Revolutionary War began 7 000 English 15 000 Scots 13 200 Scots Irish 5 200 Germans and 3 900 Irish Catholics migrated to the Thirteen Colonies 24 According to Butler 2000 up to half of English migrants in the 18th century may have been young single men who were well skilled trained artisans like the Huguenots 25 Based on scholarly analysis of names recorded at the time of the first census in 1790 English was the largest single ancestry in all U S states ranging from a high of 82 in Massachusetts to a low of 35 3 in Pennsylvania where Germans accounted for 33 3 Origins of immigrant stock in 1790 The Census Bureau published preliminary estimates of the origins of the colonial American population by scholarly classification of the names of all White heads of families recorded in the 1790 Census in a 1909 report entitled A Century of Population Growth 26 These initial estimates were scrutinized and rejected following passage of the Immigration Act of 1924 when the government required accurate official estimates of the origins of the colonial stock population as basis for computing National Origins Formula immigration quotas in the 1920s In 1927 proposed quotas based on CPG figures were rejected by the President s Committee chaired by the Secretaries of State Commerce and Labor with the President reporting to Congress the statistical and historical information available raises grave doubts as to the whole value of these computations as the basis for the purposes intended 27 Concluding that CPG had not been accepted by scholars as better than a first approximation of the truth an extensive scientific revision was produced in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies as basis for computing contemporary legal immigration quotas 28 For this task scholars estimated the proportion of names of unique derivation from each of the major national stocks present in the population as of the 1790 census The final results later also published in the journal of the American Historical Association are presented below 27 Estimated Nationalities of the White American population in the Continental United States as of the 1790 Census 27 State or Territory English a Scotch Scotch Irish Irish German Dutch French Swedish b Spanish Other Total Connecticut 155 598 67 00 5 109 2 20 4 180 1 80 2 555 1 10 697 0 30 600 0 26 2 100 0 90 25 0 01 61 372 26 43 232 236 Delaware 27 786 60 00 3 705 8 00 2 918 6 30 2 501 5 40 509 1 10 2 000 4 32 750 1 62 4 100 8 85 2 041 4 41 46 310 Georgia 30 357 57 40 8 197 15 50 6 082 11 50 2 010 3 80 4 019 7 60 100 0 19 1 200 2 27 300 0 57 621 1 17 52 886 Kentucky amp Tennessee 53 874 57 90 9 305 10 00 6 513 7 00 4 838 5 20 13 026 14 00 1 200 1 29 2 000 2 15 500 0 54 1 790 1 92 93 046 Maine 57 664 60 00 4 325 4 50 7 689 8 00 3 556 3 70 1 249 1 30 100 0 10 1 200 1 25 20 324 21 15 96 107 Maryland amp District of Columbia 134 579 64 50 15 857 7 60 12 102 5 80 13 562 6 50 24 412 11 70 1 000 0 48 2 500 1 20 950 0 46 3 687 1 77 208 649 Massachusetts 306 013 82 00 16 420 4 40 9 703 2 60 4 851 1 30 1 120 0 30 600 0 16 3 000 0 80 75 0 02 31 405 8 42 373 187 New Hampshire 86 078 61 00 8 749 6 20 6 491 4 60 4 092 2 90 564 0 40 100 0 07 1 000 0 71 34 038 24 12 141 112 New Jersey 79 878 47 00 13 087 7 70 10 707 6 30 5 439 3 20 15 636 9 20 28 250 16 62 4 000 2 35 6 650 3 91 6 307 3 71 169 954 New York 163 470 52 00 22 006 7 00 16 033 5 10 9 431 3 00 25 778 8 20 55 000 17 50 12 000 3 82 1 500 0 48 9 148 2 91 314 366 North Carolina 190 860 66 00 42 799 14 80 16 483 5 70 15 616 5 40 13 592 4 70 800 0 28 4 800 1 66 700 0 24 3 531 1 22 289 181 Pennsylvania 149 451 35 30 36 410 8 60 46 571 11 00 14 818 3 50 140 983 33 30 7 500 1 77 7 500 1 77 3 325 0 79 16 815 3 97 423 373 Rhode Island 45 916 71 00 3 751 5 80 1 293 2 00 517 0 80 323 0 50 250 0 39 500 0 77 50 0 08 12 070 18 66 64 670 South Carolina 84 387 60 20 21 167 15 10 13 177 9 40 6 168 4 40 7 009 5 00 500 0 36 5 500 3 92 325 0 23 1 945 1 39 140 178 Vermont 64 655 76 00 4 339 5 10 2 722 3 20 1 616 1 90 170 0 20 500 0 59 350 0 41 10 720 12 60 85 072 Virginia amp West Virginia 302 850 68 50 45 096 10 20 27 411 6 20 24 316 5 50 27 853 6 30 1 500 0 34 6 500 1 47 2 600 0 59 3 991 0 90 442 117 1790 Census Area 1 933 416 60 94 260 322 8 21 190 075 5 99 115 886 3 65 276 940 8 73 100 000 3 15 54 900 1 73 21 100 0 67 219 805 6 93 3 172 444 Northwest Territory 3 130 29 81 428 4 08 307 2 92 190 1 81 445 4 24 6 000 57 14 10 500 French America 2 240 11 20 305 1 53 220 1 10 135 0 68 1 750 8 75 12 850 64 25 2 500 12 50 20 000 Spanish America 610 2 54 83 0 35 60 0 25 37 0 15 85 0 35 23 125 96 35 24 000 United States 1 939 396 60 10 261 138 8 09 190 662 5 91 116 248 3 60 279 220 8 65 100 000 3 10 73 750 2 29 21 100 0 65 25 625 0 79 219 805 6 81 3 226 944 and Welsh ethnic Welsh people making up approximately 7 10 of settlers from England and Wales and Finnish including Forest Finns ethnic Finns making up more than half of New Swedish colonial settlers 29 Historians estimate that fewer than one million immigrants moved to the United States from Europe between 1600 and 1799 30 By comparison in the first federal census in 1790 the population of the United States was enumerated to be 3 929 214 31 Early United States era The Naturalization Act of 1790 limited naturalization to free white persons it was expanded to include black people in the 1860s and Asian people in the 1950s 32 This made the United States an outlier since laws that made racial distinctions were uncommon in the world in the 18th century 33 In the early years of the United States immigration not counting the enslaved who were treated as merchandise rather than people was fewer than 8 000 people a year 34 including French refugees from the slave revolt in Haiti Legal importation of enslaved African was prohibited after 1808 though many were smuggled in to sell After 1820 immigration gradually increased From 1836 to 1914 over 30 million Europeans migrated to the United States 35 The death rate on these transatlantic voyages was high during which one in seven travelers died 36 Immigrants arriving at Ellis Island 1902 After an initial wave of immigration from China following the California Gold Rush Congress passed its first immigration law the Page Act of 1875 which banned Chinese women 37 This was followed by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 banning virtually all immigration from China until the law s repeal in 1943 In the late 1800s immigration from other Asian countries especially to the West Coast became more common Exclusion Era The peak year of European immigration was in 1907 when 1 285 349 persons entered the country 38 By 1910 13 5 million immigrants were living in the United States 39 While the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 had already excluded immigrants from China the immigration of people from Asian countries in addition to China was banned by the Immigration Act of 1917 also known as the Asiatic Barred Zone Act which also banned homosexuals people with intellectual disability and people with an anarchist worldview 40 The Emergency Quota Act was enacted in 1921 limiting immigration from the Eastern Hemisphere by national quotas equal to 3 percent of the number of foreign born from each nation in the 1910 census The temporary quota system was superseded by the National Origins Formula of the Immigration Act of 1924 which computed national quotas as a fraction of 150 000 in proportion to the national origins of the entire White American population as of the 1920 census except those having origins in the nonquota countries of the Western Hemisphere which remained unrestricted 41 42 While the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 had already excluded immigrants from China the immigration of people from Asian countries in addition to China was banned by the Immigration Act of 1917 also known as the Asiatic Barred Zone Act which also banned homosexuals people with intellectual disability and people with an anarchist worldview 40 The Emergency Quota Act was enacted in 1921 followed by the Immigration Act of 1924 The 1924 Act was aimed at further restricting immigrants from Southern and Eastern Europe particularly Italian Slavic and Jewish people who had begun to enter the country in large numbers beginning in the 1890s 43 The 1924 Act also consolidated the prohibition of Asian immigration 44 Origins of immigrant stock in 1920 The National Origins Formula was a unique computation which attempted to measure the total contributions of blood from each national origin as a share of the total stock of White Americans in 1920 counting immigrants children of immigrants and the grandchildren of immigrants and later generations in addition to estimating the colonial stock population descended from the population who had immigrated in the colonial period and were enumerated in the 1790 census European Americans remained predominant although there were shifts toward Southern Central and Eastern Europe from immigration in the period 1790 to 1920 The restrictive immigration quota system established by the Immigration Act of 1924 revised and re affirmed by the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 sought to preserve this demographic makeup of America by allotting quotas in proportion to how much blood each national origin had contributed to the total stock of the population in 1920 as presented below 28 The White Population of the United States in 1920 apportioned according to the National Origins Formula prescribed by 11 c of the Immigration Act of 1924 About 56 5 of White Americans were deemed to be of postcolonial immigrant stock as of 1920 while 43 5 were deemed colonial stock Consequent immigration quotas in effect until 1965 were based upon these calculations 45 European Americans in 1790 by nationality estimated by classification of family names according to a 1909 preliminary estimate in Census Bureau report A Century of Population Growth top half and revised figures according to a scientific study by the Census Bureau in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies commissioned in the 1920s bottom half 26 27 Country of origin Total Colonial stock Postcolonial stockTotal Immigrants Children of Grandchildren of Austria 843 051 0 89 14 110 0 03 828 951 1 55 305 657 2 23 414 794 2 16 108 500 0 53 Belgium 778 328 0 82 602 300 1 46 176 028 0 33 62 686 0 46 62 042 0 32 51 300 0 25 Czechoslovakia 1 715 128 1 81 54 700 0 13 1 660 428 3 10 559 895 4 08 903 933 4 71 196 600 0 95 Denmark 704 783 0 74 93 200 0 23 611 583 1 14 189 934 1 39 277 149 1 44 144 500 0 70 Estonia 69 013 0 07 69 013 0 13 33 612 0 25 28 001 0 15 7 400 0 04 Finland 339 436 0 36 4 300 0 01 335 136 0 63 149 824 1 09 146 612 0 76 38 700 0 19 France 1 841 689 1 94 767 100 1 86 1 074 589 2 01 155 019 1 13 325 270 1 69 594 300 2 88 Germany 15 488 615 16 33 3 036 800 7 36 12 451 815 23 26 1 672 375 12 20 4 051 240 21 11 6 728 200 32 61 Greece 182 936 0 19 182 936 0 34 135 146 0 99 46 890 0 24 900 0 00 Hungary 518 750 0 55 518 750 0 97 318 977 2 33 183 773 0 96 16 000 0 08 Ireland 10 653 334 11 24 1 821 500 4 41 8 831 834 16 50 820 970 5 99 2 097 664 10 93 5 913 200 28 66 Italy 3 462 271 3 65 3 462 271 6 47 1 612 281 11 76 1 671 490 8 71 178 500 0 87 Latvia 140 777 0 15 140 777 0 26 69 277 0 51 56 000 0 29 15 500 0 08 Lithuania 230 445 0 24 230 445 0 43 117 000 0 85 88 645 0 46 24 800 0 12 Netherlands 1 881 359 1 98 1 366 800 3 31 514 559 0 96 133 478 0 97 205 381 1 07 175 700 0 85 Norway 1 418 592 1 50 75 200 0 18 1 343 392 2 51 363 862 2 65 597 130 3 11 382 400 1 85 Poland 3 892 796 4 11 8 600 0 02 3 884 196 7 26 1 814 426 13 23 1 779 570 9 27 290 200 1 41 Portugal 262 804 0 28 23 700 0 06 239 104 0 45 104 088 0 76 105 416 0 55 29 600 0 14 Romania 175 697 0 19 175 697 0 33 88 942 0 65 83 755 0 44 3 000 0 02 Russia 1 660 954 1 75 4 300 0 01 1 656 654 3 09 767 324 5 60 762 130 3 97 127 200 0 62 Spain 150 258 0 16 38 400 0 09 111 858 0 21 50 027 0 36 24 531 0 13 37 300 0 18 Sweden 1 977 234 2 09 217 100 0 53 1 760 134 3 29 625 580 4 56 774 854 4 04 359 700 1 74 Switzerland 1 018 706 1 07 388 900 0 94 629 806 1 18 118 659 0 87 203 547 1 06 307 600 1 49 Syria amp Leb 73 442 0 08 73 442 0 14 42 039 0 31 31 403 0 16 Turkey 134 756 0 14 134 756 0 25 102 669 0 75 31 487 0 16 600 0 00 United Kingdom 39 216 333 41 36 31 803 900 77 02 7 412 433 13 85 1 365 314 9 96 2 308 419 12 03 3 738 700 18 12 Yugoslavia 504 203 0 53 504 203 0 94 220 668 1 61 265 735 1 38 17 800 0 09 Other Countries 170 868 0 18 3 500 0 01 167 368 0 31 71 553 0 52 93 815 0 49 2 000 0 01 All Quota Countries 89 506 558 100 00 40 324 400 45 05 49 182 158 54 95 12 071 282 13 49 17 620 676 19 69 19 490 200 21 78 Nonquota Countries 5 314 357 5 60 964 170 2 34 4 350 187 8 13 1 641 472 11 97 1 569 696 8 18 1 139 019 5 52 1920 USA Total 94 820 915 100 00 41 288 570 43 54 53 532 345 56 46 13 712 754 14 46 19 190 372 20 24 20 629 219 21 76 Polish immigrants working on the farm 1909 The welfare system was practically non existent before the 1930s and the economic pressures on the poor were giving rise to child labor Immigration patterns of the 1930s were affected by the Great Depression In the final prosperous year 1929 there were 279 678 immigrants recorded 46 but in 1933 only 23 068 moved to the U S 30 In the early 1930s more people emigrated from the United States than to it 47 The U S government sponsored a Mexican Repatriation program which was intended to encourage people to voluntarily move to Mexico but thousands were deported against their will 48 Altogether approximately 400 000 Mexicans were repatriated half of them were US citizens 49 Most of the Jewish refugees fleeing the Nazis and World War II were barred from coming to the United States 50 In the post war era the Justice Department launched Operation Wetback under which 1 075 168 Mexicans were deported in 1954 51 Since 1965 Immigrant trunks Left from Sweden late 19th century Right from Refugee camp in Thailand 1993 The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 also known as the Hart Cellar Act abolished the system of national origin quotas By equalizing immigration policies the act resulted in new immigration from non European nations which changed the ethnic demographics of the United States 52 In 1970 60 of immigrants were from Europe this decreased to 15 by 2000 53 In 1990 George H W Bush signed the Immigration Act of 1990 54 which increased legal immigration to the United States by 40 55 In 1991 Bush signed the Armed Forces Immigration Adjustment Act 1991 allowing foreign service members who had served 12 or more years in the US Armed Forces to qualify for permanent residency and in some cases citizenship In November 1994 California voters passed Proposition 187 amending the state constitution denying state financial aid to illegal immigrants The federal courts voided this change ruling that it violated the federal constitution 56 Appointed by Bill Clinton 57 the U S Commission on Immigration Reform recommended reducing legal immigration from about 800 000 people per year to approximately 550 000 58 While an influx of new residents from different cultures presents some challenges the United States has always been energized by its immigrant populations said President Bill Clinton in 1998 America has constantly drawn strength and spirit from wave after wave of immigrants They have proved to be the most restless the most adventurous the most innovative the most industrious of people 59 Boston Chinatown Massachusetts 2008 In 2001 President George W Bush discussed an accord with Mexican President Vincente Fox Due to the September 11 attacks the possible accord did not occur From 2005 to 2013 the US Congress discussed various ways of controlling immigration The Senate and House were unable to reach an agreement 56 Nearly 14 million immigrants entered the United States from 2000 to 2010 60 and over one million persons were naturalized as U S citizens in 2008 The per country limit 8 applies the same maximum on the number of visas to all countries regardless of their population and has therefore had the effect of significantly restricting immigration of persons born in populous nations such as Mexico China India and the Philippines the leading countries of origin for legally admitted immigrants to the United States in 2013 61 nevertheless China India and Mexico were the leading countries of origin for immigrants overall to the United States in 2013 regardless of legal status according to a U S Census Bureau study 62 Nearly 8 million people immigrated to the United States from 2000 to 2005 3 7 million of them entered without papers 63 64 In 1986 president Ronald Reagan signed immigration reform that gave amnesty to 3 million undocumented immigrants in the country 65 Hispanic immigrants suffered job losses during the late 2000s recession 66 but since the recession s end in June 2009 immigrants posted a net gain of 656 000 jobs 67 Over 1 million immigrants were granted legal residence in 2011 68 For those who enter the US illegally across the Mexico United States border and elsewhere migration is difficult expensive and dangerous 69 Virtually all undocumented immigrants have no avenues for legal entry to the United States due to the restrictive legal limits on green cards and lack of immigrant visas for low skilled workers 70 Participants in debates on immigration in the early 21st century called for increasing enforcement of existing laws governing illegal immigration to the United States building a barrier along some or all of the 2 000 mile 3 200 km Mexico U S border or creating a new guest worker program Through much of 2006 the country and Congress was engaged in a debate about these proposals As of April 2010 update few of these proposals had become law though a partial border fence had been approved and subsequently canceled 71 Modern reform attempts Beginning with Ronald Reagan in the 1980s presidents from both political parties have steadily increased the number of border patrol agents and instituted harsher punitive measures for immigration violations Examples of these policies include Ronald Reagan s Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 and the Clinton era Prevention Through Deterrence strategy The sociologist Douglas Massey has argued that these policies have succeeded at producing a perception of border enforcement but have largely failed at preventing emigration from Latin America Notably rather than curtailing illegal immigration the increase in border patrol agents decreased circular migration across the U S Mexico border thus increasing the population of Hispanics in the U S 72 Presidents from both parties have employed anti immigrant rhetoric to appeal to their political base or to garner bi partisan support for their policies While Republicans like Reagan and Donald Trump have led the way in framing Hispanic immigrants as criminals Douglas Massey points out that the current moment of open racism and xenophobia could not have happened with Democratic acquiescence 73 For example while lobbying for his 1986 immigration bill Reagan framed unauthorized immigration as a national security issue and warned that terrorists and subversives are just two days driving time from the border 73 Later presidents including Democrats Bill Clinton and Barack Obama used similar security rhetoric in their efforts to court Republican support for comprehensive immigration reform In his 2013 State of the Union Address Obama said real reform means strong border security and we can build on the progress my administration has already made putting more boots on the southern border than at any time in our history 74 Trump administration policies ICE reports that it removed 240 255 immigrants in fiscal year 2016 as well as 226 119 in FY2017 and 256 085 in FY2018 Citizens of Central American countries including Mexico made up over 90 of removals in FY2017 and over 80 in FY2018 75 In January 2017 U S President Donald Trump signed an executive order temporarily suspending entry to the United States by nationals of seven Muslim majority countries It was replaced by another executive order in March 2017 and by a presidential proclamation in September 2017 with various changes to the list of countries and exemptions 76 The orders were temporarily suspended by federal courts but later allowed to proceed by the Supreme Court pending a definite ruling on their legality 77 Another executive order called for the immediate construction of a wall across the U S Mexico border the hiring of 5 000 new border patrol agents and 10 000 new immigration officers and federal funding penalties for sanctuary cities 78 The zero tolerance policy was put in place in 2018 which legally allows children to be separated from adults unlawfully entering the United States This is justified by labeling all adults that enter unlawfully as criminals thus subjecting them to criminal prosecution 79 The Trump Administration also argued that its policy had precedent under the Obama Administration which had opened family detention centers in response to migrants increasingly using children as a way to get adults into the country However the Obama Administration detained families together in administrative rather than criminal detention 80 81 Other policies focused on what it means for an asylum seeker to claim credible fear 82 To further decrease the amount of asylum seekers into the United States Attorney General Jeff Sessions released a decision that restricts those fleeing gang violence and domestic abuse as private crime therefore making their claims ineligible for asylum 83 These new policies that have been put in place are putting many lives at risk to the point that the ACLU has officially sued Jeff Sessions along with other members of the Trump Administration The ACLU claims that the policies that are currently being put in place by this Presidential Administration is undermining the fundamental human rights of those immigrating into the United States specifically women They also claim that these policies violate decades of settle asylum law 84 In April 2020 President Trump said he will sign an executive order to temporarily suspend immigration to the United States because of the COVID 19 pandemic in the United States 85 86 Biden administration policies Main article Immigration policy of the Joe Biden administration In January 2023 regarding the southern border crisis Joe Biden announced a new immigration policy that would allow 30 000 migrants per month from Cuba Haiti Nicaragua and Venezuela 87 but will also expel the migrants from those countries who violate US laws of immigration 88 The policy has faced criticism from immigration reform advocates and lawyers who decry any expansion of Title 42 87 Origins of the U S immigrant population 1960 2016 of foreign born population residing in the U S who were born in 89 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2018Europe Canada 84 68 42 26 19 15 15 14 14 14 14 13 13 South and East Asia 4 7 15 22 23 25 25 26 26 26 27 27 28 Other Latin America 4 11 16 21 22 24 24 24 24 24 24 25 25 Mexico 6 8 16 22 29 29 29 28 28 28 27 26 25 Note Other Latin America includes Central America South America and the Caribbean Persons obtaining legal permanent resident status by fiscal year 90 91 92 93 Year Year Year Year Year Year Year Year1890 455 302 1910 1 041 570 1930 241 700 1950 249 187 1970 373 326 1990 1 535 872 2010 1 042 625 2018 1 096 6111895 258 536 1915 326 700 1935 34 956 1955 237 790 1975 385 378 1995 720 177 2015 1 051 031 2019 1 031 7651900 448 572 1920 430 001 1940 70 756 1960 265 398 1980 524 295 2000 841 002 2016 1 183 505 2020 707 3621905 1 026 499 1925 294 314 1945 38 119 1965 296 697 1985 568 149 2005 1 122 257 2017 1 127 167 2021 740 002Decade Average per year1890 99 369 1001900 09 745 1001910 19 634 4001920 29 429 6001930 39 69 9001940 49 85 7001950 59 249 9001960 69 321 4001970 79 424 8001980 89 624 4001990 99 977 5002000 09 1 029 9002010 19 1 063 300Refugee numbers Operation Allies Refuge Afghans being evacuated on a US Air Force Boeing C 17 plane during the Fall of Kabul 2021 Main article Asylum in the United States According to the Department of State in the 2016 fiscal year 84 988 refugees were accepted into the US from around the world In the fiscal year of 2017 53 691 refugees were accepted to the US There was a significant decrease after Trump took office it continued in the fiscal year of 2018 when only 22 405 refugees were accepted into the US This displays a massive drop in acceptance of refugees since the Trump Administration has been in place 94 original research On September 26 2019 The Trump administration announced it plans to allow only 18 000 refugees to resettle in the United States in the 2020 fiscal year its lowest level since the modern program began in 1980 95 96 97 98 In 2020 The Trump administration announces that it plans to slash refugee admissions to U S for 2021 to a record low 15 000 refugees down from a cap of 18 000 for 2020 This is the fourth consecutive year of declining refugee admissions under the Trump term 99 100 101 Period Refugee Program 102 103 99 100 101 2018 45 0002019 30 0002020 18 0002021 15 000Contemporary immigration Naturalization ceremony Salem Massachusetts 2007 As of 2018 update approximately half of immigrants living in the United States are from Mexico and other Latin American countries 104 Many Central Americans are fleeing because of desperate social and economic circumstances in their countries Some believe that the large number of Central American refugees arriving in the United States can be explained as a blowback to policies such as United States military interventions and covert operations that installed or maintained in power authoritarian leaders allied with wealthy land owners and multinational corporations who stop family farming and democratic efforts which have caused drastically sharp social inequality wide scale poverty and rampant crime 105 Economic austerity dictated by neoliberal policies imposed by the International Monetary Fund and its ally the U S has also been cited as a driver of the dire social and economic conditions as has the U S War on Drugs which has been understood as fueling murderous gang violence in the region 106 Another major migration driver from Central America Guatemala Honduras and El Salvador are crop failures which are partly caused by climate change 107 108 109 110 The current debate is almost totally about what to do about immigrants when they get here But the 800 pound gorilla that s missing from the table is what we have been doing there that brings them here that drives them here according to Jeff Faux an economist who is a distinguished fellow at the Economic Policy Institute Until the 1930s most legal immigrants were male By the 1990s women accounted for just over half of all legal immigrants 111 Contemporary immigrants tend to be younger than the native population of the United States with people between the ages of 15 and 34 substantially overrepresented 112 Immigrants are also more likely to be married and less likely to be divorced than native born Americans of the same age 113 Immigrants are likely to move to and live in areas populated by people with similar backgrounds This phenomenon has remained true throughout the history of immigration to the United States 114 Seven out of ten immigrants surveyed by Public Agenda in 2009 said they intended to make the U S their permanent home and 71 said if they could do it over again they would still come to the US In the same study 76 of immigrants say the government has become stricter on enforcing immigration laws since the September 11 2001 attacks 9 11 and 24 report that they personally have experienced some or a great deal of discrimination 115 Public attitudes about immigration in the U S were heavily influenced in the aftermath of the 9 11 attacks After the attacks 52 of Americans believed that immigration was a good thing overall for the U S down from 62 the year before according to a 2009 Gallup poll 116 A 2008 Public Agenda survey found that half of Americans said tighter controls on immigration would do a great deal to enhance U S national security 117 Harvard political scientist and historian Samuel P Huntington argued in his 2004 book Who Are We The Challenges to America s National Identity that a potential future consequence of continuing massive immigration from Latin America especially Mexico could lead to the bifurcation of the United States 118 119 The estimated population of illegal Mexican immigrants in the US decreased from approximately 7 million in 2007 to 6 1 million in 2011 120 Commentators link the reversal of the immigration trend to the economic downturn that started in 2008 and which meant fewer available jobs and to the introduction of tough immigration laws in many states 121 122 123 124 According to the Pew Hispanic Center the net immigration of Mexican born persons had stagnated in 2010 and tended toward going into negative figures 125 More than 80 cities in the United States 126 including Washington D C New York City Los Angeles Chicago San Francisco San Diego San Jose Salt Lake City Phoenix Dallas Fort Worth Houston Detroit Jersey City Minneapolis Denver Baltimore Seattle Portland Oregon and Portland Maine have sanctuary policies which vary locally 127 Origin countries See also United States immigration statistics Inflow of New Legal Permanent Residents by region 2015 2020 Region 2015 of total 2016 of total 2017 of total 2018 91 of total 2019 92 of total 2020 93 of total in 2020Americas 438 435 41 7 506 901 42 8 492 726 43 7 497 860 45 4 461 710 44 8 284 491 40 2 38 4 Asia 419 297 39 9 462 299 39 1 424 743 37 7 397 187 36 2 364 761 35 4 272 597 38 5 25 3 Africa 101 415 9 7 113 426 9 6 118 824 10 5 115 736 10 6 111 194 10 8 76 649 10 8 31 1 Europe 85 803 8 2 93 567 7 9 84 335 7 5 80 024 7 3 87 597 8 5 68 994 9 8 21 2 Australia and Oceania 5 404 0 5 5 588 0 5 5 071 0 5 4 653 0 4 5 359 0 5 3 998 0 6 25 4 Unknown 677 0 1 1 724 0 1 1 468 0 1 1 151 0 1 1 144 0 1 633 gt 0 1 Total 1 051 031 100 1 183 505 100 1 127 167 100 1 096 611 100 1 031 765 100 707 632 100 31 4 Source US Department of Homeland Security Office of Immigration Statistics 128 129 130 131 Top 15 sending countries 2015 2021 132 Country 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Mexico 158 619 174 534 170 581 161 858 156 052 100 325 107 230 India 64 116 64 687 60 394 59 821 54 495 46 363 93 450 China 74 558 81 772 71 565 65 214 62 248 41 483 49 847 Philippines 56 478 53 287 49 147 47 258 45 920 25 491 27 511 Dominican Republic 50 610 61 161 58 520 57 413 49 911 30 005 24 553 Cuba 54 396 66 516 65 028 76 486 41 641 16 367 23 077 El Salvador 19 487 23 449 25 109 28 326 27 656 17 907 18 668 Brazil 11 424 13 812 14 989 15 394 19 825 16 746 18 351 Vietnam 30 832 41 451 38 231 33 834 39 712 29 995 16 312 Colombia 17 316 18 610 17 956 17 545 19 841 11 989 15 293 Venezuela 9 144 10 772 11 809 11 762 15 720 12 136 14 412 Jamaica 17 642 23 350 21 905 20 347 21 689 12 826 13 357 Nigeria 11 542 14 380 13 539 13 952 15 888 12 398 13 100 South Korea 17 138 21 801 19 194 17 676 18 479 16 244 12 351 Haiti 16 967 23 584 21 824 21 360 17 253 9 338 11 456Total 1 051 031 1 183 505 1 127 167 1 096 611 1 031 765 707 362 740 002Charts Inflow of New Legal Permanent Residents by continent in 2020 93 Americas 40 2 Asia 38 5 Africa 10 8 Europe 9 8 Australia and Oceania 0 6 Unknown 0 1 Languages spoken among U S immigrants 2016 89 English only 16 Spanish 43 Chinese 6 Hindi and related languages 5 Filipino Tagalog 4 French 3 Vietnamese 3 Arabic 2 Other 18 DemographyExtent and destinations See also List of U S states by net international migration Little Italy in New York ca 1900 Crowd at the Philippine Independence Day Parade in New York City Galveston Immigration Stations Year 133 Number offoreign born Percentforeign born1850 2 244 602 9 71860 4 138 697 13 21870 5 567 229 14 41880 6 679 943 13 31890 9 249 547 14 81900 10 341 276 13 61910 13 515 886 14 71920 13 920 692 13 21930 14 204 149 11 61940 11 594 896 8 81950 10 347 395 6 91960 9 738 091 5 41970 9 619 302 4 71980 14 079 906 6 21990 19 767 316 7 92000 31 107 889 11 12010 39 956 000 12 92017 44 525 500 13 72018 44 728 502 13 52019 44 932 7992010 134 2017 135 2018 136 137 Graphs are temporarily unavailable due to technical issues The United States admitted more legal immigrants from 1991 to 2000 between ten and eleven million than in any previous decade In the most recent decade when the 10 million legal immigrants that settled in the U S represent roughly one third of the annual growth as the U S population increased by 32 million from 249 million to 281 million By comparison the highest previous decade was the 1900s when 8 8 million people arrived increasing the total U S population by one percent every year Specifically nearly 15 of Americans were foreign born in 1910 while in 1999 only about 10 were foreign born 138 By 1970 immigrants accounted for 4 7 percent of the US population and rising to 6 2 percent in 1980 with an estimated 12 5 percent in 2009 139 As of 2010 update 25 of US residents under age 18 were first or second generation immigrants 140 Eight percent of all babies born in the U S in 2008 belonged to illegal immigrant parents according to a recent when analysis of U S Census Bureau data by the Pew Hispanic Center 141 Legal immigration to the U S increased from 250 000 in the 1930s to 2 5 million in the 1950s to 4 5 million in the 1970s and to 7 3 million in the 1980s before becoming stable at about 10 million in the 1990s 142 Since 2000 legal immigrants to the United States number approximately 1 000 000 per year of whom about 600 000 are Change of Status who already are in the U S Legal immigrants to the United States now when are at their highest level ever at just over 37 000 000 legal immigrants In reports in 2005 2006 estimates of illegal immigration ranged from 700 000 to 1 500 000 per year 143 144 Immigration led to a 57 4 increase in foreign born population from 1990 to 2000 145 Foreign born immigration has caused the U S population to continue its rapid increase with the foreign born population doubling from almost 20 million in 1990 to over 47 million in 2015 146 In 2018 there were almost 90 million immigrants and U S born children of immigrants second generation Americans in the United States accounting for 28 of the overall U S population 147 While immigration has increased drastically over the 20th century the foreign born share of the population is at 13 4 only somewhat below what it was at its peak in 1910 at 14 7 A number of factors may be attributed to the decrease in the representation of foreign born residents in the United States Most significant has been the change in the composition of immigrants prior to 1890 82 of immigrants came from North and Western Europe From 1891 to 1920 that number decreased to 25 with a rise in immigrants from East Central and South Europe summing up to 64 Animosity towards these different and foreign immigrants increased in the United States resulting in much legislation to limit immigration citation needed Contemporary immigrants settle predominantly in seven states California New York Florida Texas Pennsylvania New Jersey and Illinois comprising about 44 of the U S population as a whole The combined total immigrant population of these seven states was 70 of the total foreign born population in 2000 Origin Country of birth for foreign born population in the United States 1970 2015 Country of birth 2015 note 1 2010 note 2 2000 150 1990 151 1980 152 1970 152 Mexico 11 513 528 11 599 653 9 177 487 4 298 014 2 199 221 759 711 India 2 348 687 1 837 838 1 022 552 450 406 206 087 51 000 China a 2 034 383 1 583 634 988 857 529 837 286 120 172 132 Philippines 1 945 345 1 810 537 1 369 070 912 674 501 440 184 842 El Salvador 1 323 592 1 201 972 817 336 465 433 N A b N A b Vietnam 1 314 927 1 231 716 988 174 543 262 231 120 N A b Cuba 1 227 031 1 057 346 872 716 736 971 607 184 439 048 South Korea c 1 064 960 1 085 151 864 125 568 397 289 885 38 711 Dominican Republic 1 057 439 866 618 687 677 347 858 169 147 61 228 Guatemala 923 562 822 947 480 665 225 739 N A b N A b Canada 818 441 808 772 820 771 744 830 842 859 812 421 Jamaica 727 634 671 197 553 827 334 140 196 811 68 576 Colombia 723 561 648 594 509 872 286 124 N A b N A b United Kingdom d 696 048 685 938 677 751 640 145 669 149 686 099 Haiti 643 341 572 896 419 317 225 393 N A b N A b Honduras 603 179 502 827 282 852 108 923 N A b N A b Germany 577 282 617 070 706 704 711 929 849 384 832 965 Peru 447 223 419 363 278 186 144 199 N A b N A b Ecuador 437 581 428 747 298 626 143 314 N A b N A b Poland 422 208 450 537 466 742 388 328 418 128 548 107 Russia 391 974 391 101 340 177 333 725 406 022 463 462 Iran 377 741 353 169 283 226 210 941 N A b N A b Taiwan 376 666 365 981 326 215 244 102 N A b N A b Brazil 373 058 332 250 212 428 82 489 N A b N A b Pakistan 371 400 301 280 223 477 91 889 N A b N A b Italy 348 216 368 699 473 338 580 592 831 922 1 008 533 Japan 346 887 334 449 347 539 290 128 221 794 120 235 Ukraine 344 565 324 216 275 153 N A e N A e N A e Nigeria 298 532 221 077 134 940 55 350 N A b N A b Guyana 274 118 257 272 211 189 120 698 N A b N A b Venezuela 265 282 182 342 107 031 42 119 N A b N A b Nicaragua 252 196 250 186 220 335 168 659 N A b N A b Thailand 247 614 224 576 169 801 106 919 N A b N A b Trinidad and Tobago 234 483 231 678 197 398 115 710 N A b N A b Hong Kong 228 316 216 948 203 580 147 131 N A b N A b Ethiopia 226 159 164 046 69 531 34 805 N A b N A b Bangladesh 221 275 166 513 95 294 N A b N A b N A b Iraq 212 608 148 673 89 892 44 916 N A b N A b Laos 188 385 192 469 204 284 171 577 N A b N A b Argentina 187 052 170 120 125 218 92 563 N A b N A b Egypt f 179 157 143 086 113 396 66 313 N A b N A b Portugal 175 555 186 142 203 119 210 122 177 437 91 034 France g 175 198 157 577 151 154 119 233 120 215 105 385 Cambodia 159 827 156 508 136 978 118 833 N A b N A b Ghana 158 999 120 785 65 572 20 889 N A b N A b Romania 158 033 163 431 135 966 91 106 N A b N A b Myanmar 137 190 89 553 N A b 19 835 N A b N A b Greece 134 654 136 914 165 750 177 398 210 998 177 275 Israel h 134 172 133 074 109 719 86 048 N A b N A b Kenya 126 209 95 126 N A b N A b N A b N A b Ireland 124 411 128 496 156 474 169 827 197 817 251 375 Lebanon 120 620 119 523 105 910 86 369 N A b N A b Nepal 119 640 63 948 N A b N A b N A b N A b Turkey 113 937 102 242 78 378 55 087 N A b N A b Spain 109 712 86 683 82 858 76 415 N A b N A b Bosnia and Herzegovina 105 657 115 600 98 766 N A b N A b N A b Panama 103 715 104 080 105 177 85 737 N A b N A b South Africa 99 323 83 298 63 558 34 707 N A b N A b Chile 97 391 92 948 80 804 55 681 N A b N A b Indonesia 96 158 92 555 72 552 48 387 N A b N A b Somalia 92 807 N A b N A b N A b N A b N A b Saudi Arabia 90 836 48 916 N A b 12 632 N A b N A b Syria i 88 226 64 240 54 561 36 782 N A b N A b Armenia 86 727 80 972 65 280 N A e N A e N A e N A e Australia 86 447 74 478 60 965 42 267 N A b N A b Costa Rica 86 186 83 034 71 870 43 350 N A b N A b Albania 85 406 77 091 N A b N A b N A b N A b Netherlands j 84 579 85 096 94 570 96 198 103 136 110 570 Liberia 83 221 71 062 N A b N A b N A b N A b Afghanistan 79 298 60 314 45 195 28 444 N A b N A b Morocco k 74 009 58 728 N A b 15 541 N A b N A b Malaysia 72 878 58 095 49 459 33 834 N A b N A b Jordan l 72 662 60 912 46 794 31 871 N A b N A b Bulgaria 68 658 61 931 N A b N A b N A b N A b Hungary 67 594 75 479 92 017 110 337 144 368 183 236Former Czechoslovakia 67 241 70 283 83 031 87 020 112 707 160 899 Belarus 59 501 54 575 38 503 N A e N A e N A e Uzbekistan 56 275 47 664 N A b N A e N A e N A e Barbados 54 131 51 764 52 172 43 015 N A b N A b Sri Lanka 50 819 43 568 N A b N A b N A b N A b Cameroon 50 646 N A b N A b N A b N A b N A b Belize 49 432 46 717 N A b 29 957 N A b N A b Uruguay 47 933 N A b N A b Yemen 47 664 38 627 N A b N A b N A b N A b Sweden 47 190 45 856 49 724 53 676 77 157 127 070 Austria 46 167 49 465 63 648 87 673 145 607 214 014 Fiji 45 354 39 921 N A b N A b N A b N A b Moldova 42 388 34 081 N A b N A e N A e N A e Sudan 41 081 40 740 N A b N A b N A b N A b Cape Verde 39 836 N A b N A b Switzerland 39 203 N A b N A b Croatia 38 854 N A b N A b Eritrea 38 657 N A b N A b Sierra Leone 38 257 N A b N A b Serbia 36 244 N A b N A b Belgium 35 077 N A b N A b Lithuania 34 334 N A e N A e Grenada 34 041 N A b N A b Bahamas 32 962 N A b N A b Singapore 32 748 N A b N A b Dominica 31 007 N A b N A b Kuwait 30 522 N A b N A b Denmark 29 045 29 964 N A b 34 999 N A b N A b Kazakhstan 28 512 N A b N A b Azores 26 022 N A b N A b Norway 24 583 26 207 N A b 42 240 N A b N A b North Macedonia 24 529 N A b N A b span, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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