Americas, Argentina, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Economics, Europe, Italy, Latin America, Organizations, Politics, Population, Population Dynamics, Social Change, South America, Emigration and Immigration, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, Transients and Migrants
Americas, Argentina, Australia, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Economics, Europe, Italy, Latin America, North America, Pacific Islands, Population, Social Change, South America, United States, Emigration and Immigration, Population Dynamics, Social Class, Socioeconomic Factors, Transients and Migrants
Americas, Argentina, Demography, Developed Countries, Developing Countries, Europe, Italy, Latin America, Population, Population Dynamics, South America, Emigration and Immigration, Legislation as Topic, Politics, Public Policy, Transients and Migrants
Abstract
This paper analyzes the changes in Argentine laws regarding migration, mainly in the hundred years since the Argentine Constitution was passed until the 1950s. The different subsequent laws and the debates they caused are related by the author to the political and ideological trends dominating Argentina in that period as to the characteristics and oscillations of the migratory afflux. Further the paper considers Italian laws and migration policies during the same period. The author concludes that after a liberal migration policy in the 19th century, growing legal restrictions and passionate discussion on the role of immigrants followed in this century, particularly between the 2 World Wars.
Published
1987
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