
Published online:
22 September 2022
Published in print:
31 May 2022
Online ISBN:
9780300265033
Print ISBN:
9780300226867
Contents
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The Refugee Problem of the 1930s The Refugee Problem of the 1930s
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The American Response to the Refugee Challenge The American Response to the Refugee Challenge
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Wagner-Rogers, the S.S. St. Louis, and Refugee Admissions Wagner-Rogers, the S.S. St. Louis, and Refugee Admissions
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Assessing U.S. Actions in the 1930s Assessing U.S. Actions in the 1930s
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Changes to Immigration during the Early Years of the War Changes to Immigration during the Early Years of the War
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The Birth of the Bracero Program The Birth of the Bracero Program
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Mexican Immigrant Communities during the War Mexican Immigrant Communities during the War
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“Enemy Aliens” and Incarceration “Enemy Aliens” and Incarceration
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The End of Chinese Exclusion The End of Chinese Exclusion
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The U.S. and Refugees during the War The U.S. and Refugees during the War
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Further Reading Further Reading
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Chapter
Eight Newcomers and World War II
Get access
Pages
191–215
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Published:May 2022
Cite
Bon Tempo, Carl J., and Hasia R. Diner, 'Newcomers and World War II', Immigration: An American History (New Haven, CT , 2022; online edn, Yale Scholarship Online, 22 Sept. 2022), https://doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300226867.003.0009, accessed 4 May 2025.
Abstract
World War II generated immense labor needs in the United States, resulting in the beginning of the Bracero program that brought tens of thousands of Mexican temporary workers to the U.S. In the face of the European refugee crisis, political, economic, cultural, and foreign policy concerns led to a less than robust American response. During the war, the U.S. tightened border security and incarcerated those of Japanese descent, but also began to end Asian exclusion.
Subject
Social and Cultural History
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