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  1. May 29, 2018 · The Immigration and Nationality Act, sometimes known as the INA, is the basic body of immigration law in the United States. It was created in 1952. A variety of statutes governed immigration law before this, but they weren't organized in one location. The INA is also known as the McCarran-Walter Act, named after the bill's sponsors: Senator Pat ...

  2. In the previous 40 years before the act was signed, those who wanted to come to America were subject to a quota system. Immigration law favored immigrants from northern Europe and the British Isles, discriminated against those from southern and eastern Europe, and barred those from Asia and non-whites from entering the country.

  3. The Immigration Act of 1990 ( Pub. L. 101–649, 104 Stat. 4978, enacted November 29, 1990) was signed into law by George H. W. Bush on November 29, 1990. [1] It was first introduced by Senator Ted Kennedy in 1989. It was a national reform of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965.

  4. The Hart-Celler Immigration Act of 1965. This case study focuses on the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, also known as the Hart-Celler Act. Students will understand that Hart-Celler was a radical break from the national origins system it replaced (see Johnson-Reed Act in Us vs. Them ). In order to identify the reasons for this important ...

  5. Sep 24, 2015 · The Hart-Celler Act was one of the major pieces of legislation governing our nation's immigration system—how we admit people from abroad into our country. Hart-Celler opened the doors to immigrants from around the world, and in many ways, the act created the modern system of immigrant admissions we have today.

  6. Amendments to the Immigration and Nationality Act passed in that year repealed the national origins quotas, which had been enacted during the 1920s in a deliberate attempt to limit the entry of Southern and Eastern European immigrants—or more specifically Jews from the Russian Pale and Catholics from Poland and Italy, groups at the time ...

  7. 49 Words1 Page. “The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. The law did away with the racially discriminatory national origins quota system, which had governed admissions to the United States since the 1920s, and created what we have today: An immigration system largely based around family reunification and—to a lesser extent—employment ...