The Whites-Only Immigration Regime

Please join Kelly Lytle Hernandez, The Thomas E. Lifka Endowed Chair in History at UCLA, for a lecture that tracks the rise of the whites-only immigration regime and how federal authorities have yet to abolish it.

After the U.S. Civil War, federal authorities slowly built a whites-only immigration regime that targeted Black and other non-white immigrants for exclusion, punishment, and removal. By 1930, the regime was complete, making it nearly impossible for Black, Mexican, and Asian immigrants to enter the United States. During the Civil Rights Movement, Congress amended the regime’s admission system, making it possible for nonwhite immigrants to begin entering and settling in the United States in large numbers. But federal authorities have yet to fully repeal and replace the whites-only immigration regime, leaving intact the enforcement tactics designed to target nonwhite immigrants for exclusion, punishment, and removal. This talk tracks the rise of the whites-only immigration regime and how federal authorities have yet to abolish it.

This is the Ray Allen Billington Lecture in the History of the American West.

A black and white photograph of a large group of people under the awning of a building with large windows. White writing, near the top of the print, reads "AWAITING EXAMINATION, ELLIS ISLAND, 5202-13."

Awaiting examination, Ellis Island. [1 June 1920] Photograph. Retrieved from the Library of Congress, <www.loc.gov/item/97501087/>. | Library of Congress