Most Japanese correspondence is from Minister for Foreign Affairs. ; Cover title. ; [pt. 1] Correspondence from 1892 to January 29, 1908, comprising the views interchanged between the Government of the United States and the Government of Japan; and also various assurances given by the Imperial Japanese Government.--pt. 2. [Further views exchanged between the United States and Japan. Correspondence between the Department of State and other branches of government] ; Mode of access: Internet.
Most Japanese correspondence is from Minister for Foreign Affairs. ; Foreword to pt. 2 signed: Department of State, Division of Far Eastern Affairs, June 3, 1909. ; At head of title: Confidential. ; Cover title. ; [pt. 1] Correspondence from 1892 to January 29, 1908, comprising the views interchanged between the Government of the United States and the Government of Japan; and also various assurances given by the Imperial Japanese Government.--pt. 2. [Further views exchanged between the United States and Japan. Correspondence between the Department of State and other branches of government] ; Mode of access: Internet.
Corruption plays a significant role in how (un)attractive a country is to skilled workers. Rather than focusing on education or immigration policies, governments ought first to tackle corruption in the labour market if they want to attract international talent.
Due to the economic crisis, from the beginning of the new century many of Portugal's former immigrants have moved on to Spain and other European countries, in parallel with the increase in Portuguese emigration. In the context of Southern Europe, Portugal faces a singular situation. Similarly to Spain, Italy and Greece, the country registered a strong immigration in the late 1990s. However, in the early years of the new century immigration has decreased. At the same time, emigration has continued and a new wave of emigrants has left the country, mostly directed towards Spain. As regards government policy, admission and integration have been addressed but emigration has not seriously been looked into.
p. 2 ; column 6 ; 1 ¾ col. in. ; A report on the amount of travel between St. Louis, Missouri and Salt Lake City. A large part is due to trains with army supplies for government forces in Salt Lake. Aside from this there is a vast amount of miscellaneous emigration and commercial travel existing between the two points. From the St. Louis Republican.
[p. 1] ; column 5 ; 10 col. in. ; A detailed report on the condition of the Mormon emigrants camped in Carson Valley on their way to Utah; also an account of the ability and willingness of the Mormons to wage war against the federal government.
This is an editorial discussing Canadian immigration laws and criticizing the liberal government for mismanaging immigration policy while praising the conservative opposition for pursuing more --effective-- legislation which would allow the government more discretion in who they encouraged or allowed to immigrate. ; Research project undertaken by the University of the Fraser Valley South Asian Studies Institute, formerly the Centre for Indo-Canadian Studies in 2015
[p. 4] ; column 2 ; 1 ¼ col. in. ; A report on the number of Mormon emigrants expected this season. Congress has outlawed bigamy, and the enforcement of this law may cause trouble in Utah.
During the year 2000, there were significant developments in immigration law and policy with respect to employment-based immigration, family visas, asylum regulations and jurisprudence, refugee admissions, Temporary Protection Status (TPS) designations, and the implementation of the United Nations Torture Convention. The net effect of changes in employment-based immigration was a gain to both the business community and to immigrants under most categories. There was a virtual unanimous consent among lawmakers to increase the number of temporary H-1B specialty workers in the United States and to ameliorate some of the unintended consequences of previous legislation such as the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 (IIRIRA).1 To accomplish these objectives, Congress enacted two significant pieces of immigration legislation late in the year: the American Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century Act2 (AC21) and the Legal Immigration and Family Equity Act of 2000 (LIFE Act),3 as well as subsequent LIFE Act Amendments. Together, the new laws provide for a three-year increase in the H-1B visa cap, new rules allowing for "portability" and extensions of H-1B visa status, temporary restoration of the special adjustment of status provisions of former Immigration and Nationality Act4 (INA) § 245(i), and temporary nonimmigrant status for certain alien spouses and minor children of U.S. citizens and legal permanent residents during the pendency of their green card processing. In addition to these legislative developments, the executive branch and courts focused on an array of issues including permanent and temporary worker labor certifications, asylum claims, and implementation of the United Nations Torture Convention.
Il presente Working paper contiene il Policy oriented executive summary e il rapporto nazionale preparati dal gruppo di lavoro dell'IRPPS-CNR nell'ambito del progetto di ricerca europeo IDEA (Mediterranean and Eastern European countries as new immigration destinations in the European Union). Lo scopo principale del progetto è il confronto delle tendenze del fenomeno tra i paesi europei d'immigrazione, per migliorare la conoscenza delle esperienze migratorie nazionali. Il rapporto, dopo una breve introduzione dedicata al nostro passato di paese d'emigrazione, analizza tendenze e caratteristiche dei flussi migratori internazionali negli ultimi decenni, ed esamina dimensioni e struttura della popolazione straniera residente in Italia. Vengono anche esaminate le politiche migratorie e di integrazione e le diverse conseguenze del fenomeno sulla società italiana.
Report of the Royal Commission on Alien Immigration ; with Minutes of Evidence, and Appendix : Vol. I. The report (Cd.1741) -- Minutes of Evidence : Vol. II. (Cd. 1742) -- Appendix to Minutes of Evidence : Vol. III. (Cd.1741-1) -- Index and Analysis to Minutes of Evidence : Vol. IV. (Cd.1743). ; Mode of access: Internet.
The American immigration adjudication system has witnessed profound change in recent years. Starting in the 1980s, a series of legislative and administrative shifts has produced an immigration adjudication system that increasingly mirrors the criminal justice system. This phenomenon, termed the "criminalization of immigration," reflects a paradigm shift in the discourse on immigration law and policy. Historically focused on the exclusion and removal of the undocumented, immigration law and policy now increasingly prioritize removal of non-citizens with any criminal history. These developments have both revealed and exacerbated internal tensions in the Supreme Court's treatment of immigration law, leading to a moment of unparalleled dissonance between the Supreme Court's doctrine on immigration and the reality of the American immigration enforcement and adjudication systems.