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262 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 1 (1949)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0262 and id is 1 raw text is: Perspective
By HUGH CARTER

PERIODICALLY the American peo-
ple reappraise their immigration
policy. They are doing so at this time.
The present basic immigration law of
1917, containing numerous qualitative
controls including a literacy test, was
enacted by Congress after prolonged de-
bate. The quota legislation of 1924,
establishing quantitative controls, was
likewise preceded by widespread dis-
cussion.
Once the public had grown accus-
tomed to the novel quota system, inter-
est in immigration declined to a low
level until near the end of the Second
World War. Then began the public
discussion of immigration that shows
no signs of ending in the near future.
The immediate cause of this debate was
the urgent question of what to do about
the displaced persons in Europe. In-
evitably, such public discussion broad-
ened to include all aspects of immigra-
tion policy.
DISPLACED PERSONS
Much of the present discussion of
immigration is a direct result of the
war. War inevitably uproots many
people, but the conflict of 1939-45 was
unprecedented in the number of persons
that were impelled by forces beyond
their control to leave their homes and
seek temporary sanctuary elsewhere.
Resettlement of these displaced per-
sons is an urgent problem. In a war
that engulfed the entire world, the ad-
vancing and retreating armies, the aerial
bombings, the desires of political lead-
ers to be rid of troublesome minorities,
the insatiable demands of war indus-
tries for manpower, and the extermina-
tion  policies of the Nazis directed

against Jewish minorities combined to
shift millions of persons about on the
map of Europe.
The end of the war did not bring an
end to this problem. Hundreds of thou-
sands were left stranded, unable or un-
willing to return to their former homes.
They led a miserable existence in dis-
placed persons camps or under the
temporary shelter of international or-
ganizations.
SHORTAGE OF WORKERS
But while the displaced persons prob-
lem is the most dramatic of the immi-
gration questions facing the United
States, as well as one of strong hu-
manitarian appeal, the war also em-
phasized underlying demographic trends
both in America and in western Europe
that have a vital bearing on immigration
policy. Many Americans were startled
by the manpower shortages of the war
years, for the preceding fifteen years
had been a period of manpower sur-
pluses, with millions unemployed. Sud-
denly all this was reversed. The press
was filled with stories of delayed war
production because of the lack of man-
power. Needed crops rotted in the
fields because no one was available to
harvest them. A program of importing
workers from nearby countries for work
on railways and farms was instituted.
Yet the shortages continued so acute
that it was not unusual to see women
working on the railroad rights of way.
Many persons attributed these condi-
tions entirely to the millions of produc-
tive workers temporarily in the armed
services, and dreaded the surplus of
manpower that would exist as soon as
the war ended. However, in the early

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