Graffiti painted on a gate in the border wall at Friendship Park, in Playas de Tijuana.
1 2023-06-06T12:14:10-07:00 Sofia Perez Valles 3522f3aecc69e345cd2128f1ced5df44b9a92328 42723 7 Graffiti painted on a gate in the border wall at Friendship Park, in Playas de Tijuana. One protest says, "Here is where dreams become nightmares." The graffiti on the other side of the gate memorializes the veterans of the U.S. armed forces who have been deported. meta 2023-06-11T20:36:05-07:00 Stanford Digital Collections, https://purl.stanford.edu/ww345pm0243 2014 StillImage David Bacon photography archive, circa 1970-1990 Bacon, David, 1948- (photographerpht) 1 photograph Tijuana (Baja California, Mexico) Image From: Work & Social Justice: The David Bacon Photography Archive at Stanford Sofia Perez Valles 3522f3aecc69e345cd2128f1ced5df44b9a92328Media
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created | dcterms:created | 2023-06-06T12:14:10-07:00 |
Version 7
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/us-latinx-activism-and-protests/graffiti-painted-on-a-gate-in-the-border-wall-at-friendship-park-in-playas-de-tijuana.7 |
versionnumber | ov:versionnumber | 7 |
title | dcterms:title | Graffiti painted on a gate in the border wall at Friendship Park, in Playas de Tijuana. |
description | dcterms:description | Graffiti painted on a gate in the border wall at Friendship Park, in Playas de Tijuana. One protest says, "Here is where dreams become nightmares." The graffiti on the other side of the gate memorializes the veterans of the U.S. armed forces who have been deported. |
url | art:url | https://purl.stanford.edu/ww345pm0243/iiif/manifest?iiif-manifest=1 |
default view | scalar:defaultView | meta |
was attributed to | prov:wasAttributedTo | https://scalar.usc.edu/works/us-latinx-activism-and-protests/users/39785 |
created | dcterms:created | 2023-06-11T20:36:05-07:00 |
type | rdf:type | http://scalar.usc.edu/2012/01/scalar-ns#Version |
source | dcterms:source | Stanford Digital Collections, https://purl.stanford.edu/ww345pm0243 |
date | dcterms:date | 2014 |
type | dcterms:type | StillImage |
relation | dcterms:relation | David Bacon photography archive, circa 1970-1990 |
identifier | dcterms:identifier | https://purl.stanford.edu/ww345pm0243 |
contributor | dcterms:contributor | Bacon, David, 1948- (photographerpht) |
format | dcterms:format | 1 photograph |
coverage | dcterms:coverage | Tijuana (Baja California, Mexico) |
by-line | iptc:By-line | Image From: Work & Social Justice: The David Bacon Photography Archive at Stanford |
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2023-05-04T13:43:32-07:00
Migration in the United States
31
The United States has often been called a "nation of immigrants," here we observe specific instances of migration policy within the United States and how certain themes regarding immigrants have changed or been maintained. By: Zulema Arguello, Sofia Perez Valles, and Natalie Manzo-Silva
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2023-06-06T12:58:04-07:00
The United States has often been called a "nations of immigrants." It has historically been considered a land of opportunity for anyone looking for a better life. In the 17th century, when European settlers began to immigrate to establish colonies in "undiscovered" land, the first notions of what exactly it meant to be a "land of opportunity." Some migrated to improved their prospects and futures, others migrated to escape religious prosecution in England, this became a founding idea of the United States: a land for the free.
As the concept of the "United States" began to form in the original 13 colonies, the declaration of independence, the bill of rights and various other documents written by the founding fathers established founding ideas of what it meant to be a member of the United States of America. This however came at the expense of the already existing nations and communities whose land was stolen by the original 13 colonies and would continue to be stolen by explicit policy decisions such as the Indian Removal Act of 1830 and the notion of "Manifest Destiny," the idea that it was the divine mission of the United States to expand its territory across the North American continent and with it civilization, democracy and freedom to the "savages." This would inform the expansionist policy within the United States to allow it to become the conjunction of states it is today, such as the Mexican-American War (1846-1848) that was orchestrated by the United States in order to obtain what is present-day California, Nevada, Utah, most of Arizona, and parts of New Mexico, Colorado, and Wyoming.
Throughout much of its immigration policy, the United States has been exclusionary, from the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 to present-day policy such as the "Muslim Ban," an executive order by former President Trump in 2017. Regardless, the United States had maintained its narrative of being the land of opportunity, even having a concept such as the "American Dream." Nowadays, this isn't exactly true.
In these pages, we will observe specific instances of migration policy within the United States and how certain themes regarding immigrants have changed or been maintained.