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Immigrants, Refugees and Asylees over the Last Century |
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The mix of countries of origin for immigrants
has shifted over the century. In the early years of the twentieth century
most immigrants to the United States came from Europe; by the beginning
of the twenty-first century they arrived from the countries of the Western
Hemisphere and Asia.
Data Source The Department of Homeland Security is the primary source for the most reliable and detailed figures assembled on immigration to the United States. The figures were previously maintained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). In 2003, the newly-formed Department of Homeland Security (DHS) incorporated the various functions of INS, including the maintenance of data on immigration. In general, separate figures on refugees and asylees have been available only since 1981. Legal Immigration—1910–2006 The flow of documented immigrants to the
U.S. over the last century has been steady but with ebbs in certain decades.
In recent decades it has been increasing in actual numbers, but the figures
show that the heaviest influx—as a percentage of the U.S. total
population—occurred in the decade 1910 to 1919. During these ten
years, 6.3 million people entered the U.S. as immigrants (Table 1). According
to U.S. Census records, the total population of the country in 1910 was
92 million; in 1920, it was 106 million. The number of immigrants represented
45 percent of the total population increase over the decade—a very
high figure. Refugees and Asylees While many immigrants, at all periods, have been trying to flee untenable political situations, only since 1980 have political refugees admitted to the United States and those granted asylum had statutory status separate from others admitted to the country. (The main distinction between refugees and those seeking asylum is that refugees apply for admission while still outside the country and asylees apply when they enter or at some point afterward.) In comparison to the total number of immigrants, the number of those admitted under these categories has been relatively low. From 1997 through 2006 only 574,000 refugees arrived in the country; about 181,000 people were granted political asylum. Tables 2 and 3 show that these individuals have arrived from all over the world. At various points over the decade, people fled from countries on all continents. The countries of Oceania (Australia, New Zealand and some smaller Pacific island nations) were the exception. More complete tables for the figures discussed in the preceding article are available at http://justice.uaa.alaska.edu/forum/24/4winter2008/e_immigrationtables.html. |
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