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tv   U.S.- Mexican Relations and Immigration  CSPAN  March 5, 2017 9:11am-9:31am EST

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no reason why love can't come after. you all so much. [applause] [captions copyright national cable satellite corp. 2017] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. visit ncicap.org] >> you are watching american history tv, 48 hours of programming on american history every weekend on c-span 3. follow us on twitter @cspan history for information on her schedule and to keep up with the latest history news. >> recently, american history tv was at the american historical association central meeting in denver, colorado. we spoke with professors, office and graduate students about their research. this interview is about 20 minutes. with jennifer cullison
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who is a phd candidate at the university of colorado, also rachel grace newman, phd candidate at columbia university here to talk about immigration and student visas in the 20 century. your research is on mexican sunnis coming to the u.s. during the 20 century. tell us about who was coming and why and how they were able to do that. ms. cullison: actually mexican etudents started coming to th united states from the 19th century. most of them came from elite mexican families who wanted the best education for their chosen. what started to change as the mexican government began to offer scholarships, and that opened up the possibility of studying in the united states to a broader group of students who came from middle-class backgrounds. host: they were offering scholarships to mexican students to study in the united states? ms. cullison: that's right. their own government supported them to study abroad.
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and they try to give them to the best students as a kind of reward for their academic merits, but absolutely social connections played a role. start seeingid we large numbers of mexican students increase in terms of coming to the united states for their education? ms. cullison: the difference between rachel's research and minor she is looking at students and middle-class migrants as she would like to consider them as part of the migrant population, but i am looking at what i would call a different sector of the m iner population -- the working class and the laborers. my work covers from 1952 forward, right in the middle of the -- program. i can't really speak too much to middle-class student migration, i can speak to the project of dealing with the income and outflow of mexican migrants. host: you go back to 1952.
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what's particular important about that date for you? ms. cullison: 1952 was basically when congress codified immigration law. before that, there had been several statutes that work together but they came at that point with the the karen - mc codify allr act to of them. that is important because they are outlining in one space what kind of enforcement capabilities the ins has. you're both dealing with two separate entitieso of immigrants. where are the similarities you see in terms of what is driving mexican immigration in the historical context? ms. newman: absolutely students going toing at when the united states to do something that was going to improve their future prospects. instead of perhaps traveling to work, they had money to go home and build a better house and provide a better education for
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their children. they were coming to the united states to study, get a u.s. degree that they hoped would advance their professional careers in mexico. between the differences the labor and student migrants were not always so clear. sometime students work in similar jobs that labor migrants did. they could be confused for labor migrants in some situations, which students could take offense at, because of their own prejudices. fall within the broader group of mexicans in the united states. obviously students, come from better backgrounds and perhaps laborers in terms of their wealth and their parents, were the way they were treated by the u.s. government, by immigration officials, were they different? ms. cullison: i would say soap . -- i would say so. for the laborers, it was very much a process in the 1950's, i go forward to 1996 and i can explain that more later, but it was very much a process of
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screening who would be good potential laborers and agricultural and some industry at the time. thist was very fluid with program but the program would only allow people to be here for a certain restricted period for a season or two. then they were supposed to return to mexico. the program was, as continued from 1942-1954, more people were crossing the border without authorization, and so, what i start to track is how the government deals with that increasing number of undocumented people. and rounding them up. most people have heard of operation went back. -- wetback. in 1954, when 1 million people are apprehended. have of those are detained. and most of them are returned to mexico through voluntary departure. but i focus on the pieces that are over this period. host: does any of your research look at how americans view this
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wave of migrants, either in the labor community or students coming to the u.s. in terms of our reaction to immigration through that time in history? ms. cullison: yes, yes. i'm very much tracking that. it's very much mixed feelings in the, during the program. as we get to the end of it in 1964, there are some people saying this is a humanitarian problem, people are not being treated well. we need to have some more enforcement in the way that those, the department of labor is handling this. other people are feeling like it is a competition for labor, so they would rather not have this program. so, for most of those two reasons, the program ends. it is not really, though, until the 1970's we start to see, as some scholars have pointed out by looking at the covers of national magazines, the ways in which the american public is truly concerned about tidal of mexicanis influx
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laboring people that are undocumented that are a threat to the country. host: was it somehow safer for mexican student on college campuses, was there less pushback from the american public? ms. newman: absolutely. speaking in general terms, people and united states have been interested to have mexican students on campus. that's something that dates back to the early 20th century. but i would say particular in the 1930's and 1940's, because there was this broad inpulse to actually promote friendship between united states and the rest of latin america, people were very excited to have mexican students as representatives of their andtry, as mexican culture, they were eager to form friendships with them as kind of a microcosm of the friendship we were trying to create between united states and mexico. host: in 2017 you hear a lot about overstays visas. how, difficult, how lenient has the government then for students in particular we start with you.
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in terms of visa overstays. ms. newman: visa researches for student for absolutely real and they do affect students ability, for example, to perform certain types of work in the united states. host: so, they can only do a limited amount of hours? ms. newman: and certain types of work. on-campus jobs are allowed. and we see occasionally students running into problems with their student visas, but i think we will see a real difference between what i found and what jennifer has found because when students do have visa trouble there is some kind of leniency an understanding that this is a bureaucratic error rather than a criminal act. y about a mexican students studying at the university of wisconsin in the 1940's. he had come to the united states with a tourist visa and it expired. in his memoirs he wrote decades later, he says an fbi agent came to his apartment, asked him what his situation was, and said, all right, look, well, next time you
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go back to mexico, be sure to get the right visa. anythingot going to do because i have asked around at the university, you are a good student, you are a good person. so, we are going to let this go. i'm not sure an fbi agent was a government agent involved, and the story may be embellished but i does think it does give us a sense of more of understanding treatment that students received. their visas were more of a formality than anything else. host: tell us about the dynamic of visas and life is stay for mexican laborers in the united states. ms. cullison: the ins is really selling itself during this period, especially studying in 1954 as an agency that is very much interested in humane treatment of the people it deals with, particularly relating to visas in the process and then doesin the way it
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enforcement. at the end of that year, the attorney general decided to make this announcement that the ins is no longer the business of detaining anybody. he wanted to downsize. and he said that what he would like to see is the service, as they called it, the ins letting people who were coming in with missing paperwork, with bureaucratic problems, continue on. that they could take care of it. they believed in the integrity of every migrant. that statement i take to mean, he is thinking about in,le-class people coming maybe even to the east coast. i do not think he was so much thinking about laboring classes from mexico. 1961,etween 1954 and detention really, really most significant way, to its lowest number in 1961, to 791 people on any given day were detained. and so, this humanitarian
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trajectory, though, over the 1960's you are here lyndon baines johnson called the ins the government with a heart, yet we see all levels of metrics increasing for detention. so, one of the things i'm pointing out in my research, despite this rhetoric of humanitarian service, the ins was especially with one particular population, working-class mexican migrants, not so interested in being so humane. i point out some ways in which the detention process becomes even a little bit more of a criminal justice kind of situation in immigration courtrooms and the way they deal with bonding and in the way they deal with the interagency efforts to find criminal mexicans, which actually we are in decline in terms of detentions over the period, but they were working to find them because the believed they were there. host: what brought you both to your field of research? ms. newman: i actually did a
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previous project about migrant children who were the children of farmworkers and the state in mexico who went to the united states for six months every year to harvest and then came back. i was interested in education across the border. while it was looking for some more sources to expand that project starting my phd, i kept finding all these references of scholarships for students. i had not heard about this before but i knew that many of my mexican friends and united states had these scholarships. i said, wonder if anyone had written history of that. no one had. i got very interested and pursue the topic. came out of ait personal situation. i had been living in brazil for a while, and i ended up bringing back the man who eventually was my husband and the father of my son. the process that he went through in order to have a fiance viasa to become a permanent resident and a citizen, i started to question the way the whole policy worked. and it wanted to see how it had
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changed. host: rachel mentioned flows of migration. how is mexican migration broadly different from other immigration, a border country? back andt this flow of forth between united states. what is the historical context for that? ms. cullison: the historical context has a lot to do with the fact that much of the u.s., the western region used to be mexico. than, youhas for more know, more than a century, been a circular migration of people for families, just with mercantile kinds of circuits, this natural human travel where the border to not really have any significance in a political way to these people. that were making this circular migration. the 20thened over century with the invention of border patrol in the 1920's but then with increasing enforcement efforts, starting especially in the 1960's, what starts to happen is people start to decide that it's too risky to return to
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mexico. for fear of being able to come back in. to be stopped at the border. if they have already got a family established here, if they have other ties and interest, it is better to state her -- stay here. what some scholars have called the unintended consequence of immigration policies set in the 1960's, which was meant really at the end of the program, to discontinue these flows, the flow did not really discontinue and the way they intended. the circulation kind of stopped, but it stopped on the side, with more mexican communities growing. through that particular avenue but also through ways in which families of mexicans through changes in 1965, could migrate to the u.s. legally, as well. host: what about in terms of students? a lot more immigrants coming to
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the country now of different nationalities. has this presented a challenge for students of mexican heritage from mexico coming to the u.s.? are they having as many opportunities as they used to? ms. newman: certainly mexican students have always been a big group of foreign students in the united states, but it has really never been the largest student group, group of foreign students in the united states. the numbers have grown over time. today we are talking about maybe 17,000 mexican students in the united states. and in terms of obstacles, i would say probably the biggest one has to do with funding. very difficult to afford an education in the united states unless you have one of those scholarships. i think that is going to be the biggest barrier for a young person in mexico to study her. host: you are half all along on your research, and what you hope when it is done that will happen with it? what you hope people get out of it? ms. newman: i am at the stage of
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writing up the research. i have done all the archival and interview work. now i am producing the chapters. i am hoping to eventually turn it into a book. i think that today we really have to think hard about the current climate of anti-mexican sentiment that is being promoted by the incoming administration. and the effects that could potentially have on not just mexican students but all mexicans thinking of coming to the united states, whether it is for work, for travel, to study. i think we could see some real changes going forward. so i am hoping the historical context i can provide can give us some ways to think about that. host: same question, where are you and what you hope the next step is? ms. cullison: at exactly the same stage as rachel. i am in the writing process. i expect to be done and about the next year i do also intend to turn this into a monograph, into a book. the way i see it connecting to the present is really on two levels. one is in the larger study of the growth of what is called
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mass incarceration or hyper incarceration. today, there are 2.3 million people incarcerated in this country. and immigrant detention makes up less than 2% of the. my work isargue in that immigrant detention grew earlier, grew faster and grew h bigger scale than regular criminal detention or incarceration. in other words, over the period of 1952 today, i think immigrant intention grew something like 15 times, and it was only nine times for criminal incarceration. so we can see through this that that it is something of a cautionary tale to look at the ways in which immigrant detention grew and maybe apply that overall to the -- particular population to anti-immigrant sentiment and the question of what is going on with this in terms of even as connection to the privatization, the privatization of detention
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space actually happened before the privatization of criminal detention space. overall, what i am hoping is that people will feature my work, not only the historical trajectory, but begin to question the foundations of what is in place today. your research,of is there an area where the think the general public does not is not aware enough about or understood, what would you say that is? ms. newman: i think that people do not necessarily understand how important scholarships are for promoting student migration and the exchanges between countries that those can alone. -- allow. have an image of our minds of the international students being the sons of pr inces. if we want to have a diverse group of mexican students in the united states, we need to continue to support scholarships from government, from
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foundations and universities to keep that student population growing host: does the mexican government keep up that scholarship program? . absolutely. i think scholarshipshave been protected, even in moments when there have been budget cuts to science and other parts of education. : rachel grace newman, phd candidate at columbia and jennifer cullison, phd candidate at university of colorado. thanks for being with us on american history tv. >> you are watching american history tv, all weekend, every weekend on c-span 3. to join the conversation, like us on facebook @c-span history. next on american history tv, historian kenneth greenberg discusses historical portrayals of nat turner, the african-american leader of a slave rebellion in virginia. he describes the competing accounts of turner's rebellion

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