The Chinese Exclusion Act

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In the light of recent immigration and laws to prevent certain classes and cultures of people from entering the United States, many scholars conducted historical research examining the first immigration law that limited the Chinese people from entering the United States with the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act. U.S. Congress, Senate, Congressional Order on Labor and Immigration, 47th Cong., 1882, assessed May 27, 2017, https://www.ourdocuments.gov/doc.php?doc=47#. Most scholars interpreted the Chinese Exclusion Act through the lens of restriction. Scholars devoted more attention to the conduct of the White American officials than to that of the Chinese. For the most part, the Chinese spoke little to no English that would have limited the availability …show more content…
Hsu in the book titled: Politics and Society in Modern America: The Good Immigrants: How the Yellow Peril became the Model Minority argued that the exemptions of the Chinese Exclusion Act benefited the Chinese elite and skilled worker due to the vetting process in the laws. In this way, Hsu disputes Lee's position that the Chinese Exclusion Law increased fraud with the paper son and daughter system. Madeline Y. Hsu, Politics, and Society in Modern America: The Good Immigrants: How the Yellow Peril Became the Model Minority (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2015), ebook Collection …show more content…
Shauna Lo, "Chinese Women Entering New England: Chinese Exclusion Act Case Files, Boston, 1911-1925," The New England Quarterly no. 81 (2008): 387, accessed June 10, 2016, http://www.jstor.org.ezproxy.snhu.edu/stable/20474653. Lo supports both Lee and Hsu that the Chinese Exclusion Law restricted Chinese immigrants but never concludes that the skilled worker was a candidate for admittance to the United States. Ibid, 398. That is because Lo's focal point in the article is how the Chinese immigrants circumvented the Chinese exclusion law by entering ports in New England that were less intense than San Francisco allowing Chinese men to "agree for a fee-to bring over what is known as "paper" sons and daughters." Ibid, 386. Thereby, the basis of Lo's argument is that women faced adequate challenges once receiving their paper identities and immigrating to the United