Americanization in the states : immigrant social welfare policy, citizenship, & national identity in the United States, 1908-1929

Author(s)

    • Ziegler-McPherson, Christina A.
    • Greenwald, Richard
    • Minchin, Timothy J.

Bibliographic Information

Americanization in the states : immigrant social welfare policy, citizenship, & national identity in the United States, 1908-1929

Christina A. Ziegler-McPherson ; foreword by Richard Greenwald & Timothy J. Minchin

(Working in the Americas)

University Press of Florida, c2009

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 175-227) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In the first decades of the twentieth century, a number of states had bureaus whose responsibility was to help immigrants assimilate into American society. Often described negatively as efforts to force foreigners into appropriate molds, Christina Ziegler-McPherson demonstrates that these programs - including adult education, environmental improvement, labor market regulations, and conflict resolutions - were typically implemented by groups sympathetic to immigrants and their cultures. ""Americanization in the States"" offers a comparative history of social welfare policies developed in four distinct regions with diverse immigrant populations: New York, California, Massachusetts, and Illinois. By focusing on state actions versus national agencies and organizations, and by examining rural and western approaches in addition to urban and eastern ones, Ziegler-McPherson broadens the historical literature associated with Americanization. She also reveals how these programs, and the theories of citizenship and national identity used to justify their underlying policies, were really attempts by middle-class progressives to get new citizens to adopt Anglo-American, middle-class values and lifestyles.

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