Russian in the United States (Kagan and Dillon) Emma Raykhman

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Russian in the United States (Kagan and Dillon) Emma Raykhman"

Transcription

1 Russian in the United States (Kagan and Dillon) Emma Raykhman

2 Introduction: Statistics Russian is number 8 among the most commonly spoken non- English languages in the USA. According to the 2007 American Community Survey there were 851,174 home speakers of Russian that yr. From , the number of Russian speakers increased by 191 percent (greatest increase of all languages in Census)

3 Statistics (continued) Immigration to the US was especially prevalent from when more than 300,000 immigrants arrived from the former Soviet Union 80 percent of these immigrants were Jewish (US Department of Justice) More relaxed emigration policies in the former Soviet Union and the USA s acceptance of refugees led to these increases

4 History: Russian language Russian belongs to the Slavic branch of the Indo- European language family and is an East Slavic language (along with Belarusian an Ukrainian) It is the most geographically widespread language of Eurasia and the most widely spoken out of all Slavic languages It was the state language of the Russian Empire (1721) and USSR ( ) and for this reason is spoken in 15 areas that are different ethnically, culturally, and linguistically Russian is also one of the official languages of the UN

5 History: Immigration The first documented Russian settlement in the US was on the Aleutian island Kodiak in Alaska in 1784 The Russian settlers were motivated by profit and most were employees of the Russian-American company and were traders or fur hunters

6 Czar Alexander II sold Alaska to the US in 1867 and afterwards most Russians returned to their homelands but many Aleuts and Eskimos converted to Russian Orthodoxy Also many Russian Orthodox Old Believers who emigrated from the USSR have their own villages in Alaska today In 1882 there were 16,918 Russian-speaking residents in the US and by 1899 there were 387,416 This was the highest total for any yr in the 19 th century

7 Shortages of farmland forced farmers and peasants to leave the Russian Empire and over many decades hundreds of thousands of Ukrainians, Belarusians, Lithuanians, and Poles emigrated and arrived at Ellis Island in the US. The imperial Russian government didn t allow ethnic Russians to emigrate (the 1919 Census identifies less than 60,000 in the USA) Also many Jews fled the Russian Empire near the turn of the 20 th century because of anti-semitism that turned into pogroms, or violent acts directed at them

8 What is known as the first wave of Russian immigration to the US in the 20 th century occurred between during the communist revolution Around 1 million Russians (most of whom had struggled against the Bolsheviks), fled the country and many came to the US According to the 1920 US Census there were 392,049 Russianborn US citizens (just 10 yrs earlier there were 57,926) Most of these Russians were members of the aristocracy and intelligentsia

9 In the 1930s and 40 s immigration from the Soviet Union slowed down b/c of restrictions imposed by Stalin s government (only about 14,016 immigrants from ) Then the 2 nd wave of immigration occurred after WWII and many of these people were brought out of the USSR by the German army as forced labor or were POWs and refused to return to their homeland The 3 rd wave began in the early 1970s when Soviet Jews who were considered political refugees, received almost unlimited immigration by US authorities who pressed the Soviet government to release them

10 The 4 th wave began in 1987 when President Gorbachev announced that victims of religious persecution could leave for the first time in 70 yrs This allowed many Soviet Jews to leave who couldn t before; they got visas and many emigrated to Israel and the USA Estimates say that in 1990 one-quarter million Soviet Jews were living in the US Some of the immigrants in the 3 rd and 4 th waves began in unskilled jobs b/c of limited English skills, but most of them acclimated well to the US lifestyle and found good jobs. The majority were educated and had studied some English.

11 Demographics According to the 2000 Census, almost 3 million US residents said they have Russian ancestry (this includes all waves of immigration, from early to late) In this Census, citizens of the former Soviet Union were asked about their ethnicity and people who defined themselves as Russians made up 49%, while those who defined themselves as Russian and another ethnicity made up 51%. Also Jews form 80% of immigration from the USSR because of the prevalent anti-semitism

12 Table 11.1 Russian ethnicity and language Home language Claim Russian ethnicity Claim Russian + other ethnicity Russian 71.8% 0.5% (278,424,674) (7,571) No Russian 28.2% 99.5% (338,663) (1,381,793) Total 100% 100% (278,763,337 ) (1,389,364) This table shows that claiming Russian ethnicity isn t the same as being a speaker of Russian. It is noted that almost 100% of of those who don t speak Russian and about 1/3 of those US residents who claim only Russian ancestry don t speak the language or don t speak it at home.

13 Table 11.2 States with the largest Russian-speaking populations Ages 5+ Percentage of all US Russian Speakers New York 232, California 147, New Jersey 45, Washington 44, Pennsylvania 34, Massachusetts 34, Illinois 34, Florida 34, Maryland 21, Oregon 17,

14 Table 11.3 Increase in Russian-speaking population by US state State Percentage change New York 73, , California 49, , Pennsylvania 11,538 39, Illinois 15,075 37, New Jersey 18,707 36, Massachusetts 10,907 32,

15 According to table 11.3 there has been a huge increase in the Russian population in many states, with the greatest concentration in the Eastern and Western states which is usually true with US immigrant populations. NY and LA are home to the greatest concentrations of Russian speakers and in all states concentrations of Russian speakers are found in urban centers This is b/c the majority of Russian immigrants came from urban centers so they settled in the large US cities and in the USSR urban life had a strong appeal

16 Socioeconomic and educational status According to the 2000 Census, Russian speakers are generally well-educated with 51% having at least the equivalent of a bachelor s degree and 92% having at least a high school diploma Also 75% of Russian speakers over the age of 5 report speaking English well or very well All Russian speakers independent of ethnicity or language are more likely to have jobs requiring a higher level of education when compared to the general US population

17 Among Russian speaking immigrants, 18% are in management and 36% are in professional occupations (compared to 13% and 20% of the general population) They re also less likely to be in construction and production (5% and 7% vs. 10% and 15% in the whole US) Russian speakers in the US tend to work in the for-profit sector of the economy and only 10% are self employed

18 Public presence of Russian In many US cities especially NY and LA there are Russian immigrant communities that preserve elements of Russian everyday life and culture But the most prominent public face of Russian in the USA is within academia such as media, business, and education

19 Media The 1 st Russian-language newspaper in the US was published from and was called Svoboda (Freedom) It was a bilingual, semi-monthly periodical known in English as the Alaska Herald Today, Russian-language print and media resources are easy to find; magazines are available by subscription and in Russian bookstores and grocery stores

20 The newspaper that has served the Russian community in the US the longest is Novoe russkoe slovo (The New Russian Word), which has been published since These newspapers are published in US cities with high Russian populations There is also Russian-language radio that broadcasts from Russia and locally, and Russian television networks which broadcast around the world

21 Business There are Russian-oriented small businesses like grocery stores, bookstores and beauty salons in areas with large populations of Russian speakers In large cities there are medical offices that advertise that the doctor or staff speak Russian and there are Russian-American Medical and Dental Associations (RAMA, RADA) that hold annual meetings Also Russian business associations have been established

22 Education In terms of its difficulty, Russian is classified as a Level III language in terms of difficulty for native English speakers This was decided based on the number of hrs of study that are required for English speakers to reach a certain degree of proficiency Level I: Spanish and French, Level II: German, Level III: Russian, Level IV: Chinese, Korean, Arabic, Japanese

23 Before the 1960s, Russian wasn t widely taught in the US. Before WWII, only 19 US universities offered Russian courses B/c of the US-Soviet alliance during WWII, Russian teaching expanded and by 1946, 190 academic institutions offered Russian In 1957 when the USSR launched the 1 st Sputnik, the US gov. passed the National Defense Education Act to improve science instruction and promote the study of Russian. The consequence was the establishment of many new departments of Russian at universities

24 From , enrollment in college Russian courses doubled Another growth spurt was in the 1980s when Gorbachev promised reform and democratization and that yr about 24,000 students were studying Russian at the college level. By 1990 that number reached 44,000 As the US no longer perceived the USSR as a threat to security or an economic competitor, enrollments slowly decreased again: shows the relationship b/w politics and language

25 In the past few yrs, Russian has been an economic and political force and b/c of this change there is once again motivation to study Russian as a foreign or heritage language Russian also is in the top tier of strategic languages for the US gov. Unlike some other languages like Chinese that have a system of community/church schools that preserve immigrant children s culture and language, there are few Russian schools like this.

26 B/c of increased immigration from the USSR, in the 1980s a lot of heritage learners began to appear in college Russian classes The levels of competence in Russian of children of the 3 rd and 4 th waves of immigration depends on the amt. of education they received prior to immigration Russian heritage language learners can be divided into 4 groups according to their age at time of emigration, linguistic biographies, and their resulting language competence

27 Table 11.4 Groups of heritage Russian-language learners Group 1 Education: Graduated or almost graduated from high school in Russia or a former Soviet republic Russian proficiency: Fully developed grammatical system, native range of vocab., full understanding of and connection to Russian culture Group 2 Education: Attended school in the USSR for 5-7 yrs and thus experienced an interruption in Russianlanguage development in adolescence Russian proficiency: Strong knowledge of Russian grammatical system but w/o the same range of vocab. or register as educated native speakers.

28 Table 11.4 Continued Group 3 Education: Attended elementary school in the USSR Russian proficiency: Have some Russian literacy but their language development was interrupted at an early age (7-9) so range of vocab. is limited. When they take Russian classes, they often recover some of the lost language Group 4 Education: Emigrated as pre-schoolers or were born in the USA to Russian-speaking parents and have been educated primarily or solely in English Russian proficiency: Never use Russian outside of home so vocab. is limited to home sphere; typically don t have a strong control of Russian grammar. Reanalyze their language at a later age to arrive at a diff. grammatical system

29 By the late 1990s b/c of the understanding that heritage learners instructional needs really differed from foreign language learners, some colleges began offering special courses for these students. Many descendants of Russian immigrants choose to enroll in these heritage speaker courses and surveys are being done to discover the main reason why The most common motivating factor cited by 90% of respondents was the desire to communicate better with their families in the USA.

30 A third are also motivated by plans to travel to the former Soviet Union Only 14% of the respondents indicate their motivation as b/c it is easy for me, contrary to the idea held by Russian instructors that heritage speakers hope to get an easy A 3 major professional organizations serve the needs of researches, teachers and students in the Russian field: the American Association of Teachers of Slavic and East European Languages (founded in 1941), the American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies (1948), and the American Council of Teachers of Russian (1974) which expanded its focus to become American Councils for International Education in 1987

31 Evidence of language shift to English and of Russian maintenance Shift to English has been rapid among Russian speaking immigrants in the US; in many cases Russian is used primarily at home The majority of Russian-speaking immigrants don t live in an ethnic community and tend to disperse quickly into the general population that speaks English An explanation for why this occurs is b/c the USSR was a vast empire that united diverse populations by political means and once these political restraints were lifted, unification disappeared

32 Another factor that contributes to the lack of ethnic neighborhoods is the Russian culture s attitude towards socializing and friendship Russians have very close friendships but usually they don t socialize with people outside their own close circle so they wouldn t be likely to live in huge communities.

33 Russian speakers in the USA have also introduced English language features into their Russian This is due to sociopolitical reasons and the fact that Russian speakers had to find a way to express ideas that did not exist in Soviet society or language. For example, for the 3 rd wave of Russian immigrants ( ), they moved from a state-controlled economy to a market economy so for words like mortgage that didn t exist in Russian, they would either pronounce it as in English or Russianize it phonetically and morphologically (morgidz)

34 Also for Russian speakers in the US, semantic extensions are common like using the Russian word for K-12 school, skola, to refer to college and even grad school. There are many attitudes towards the preservation of Russian in the US; at one end are those who insist on the preservation of pure Russian and on the other are the majority of speakers who incorporate some English into their speech, especially words and expressions that don t exist in Russian or would require lengthy explanation. Some immigrants or heritage speakers use code-switching and semantic expressions to such a degree that other speakers find it hard to understand them, so the impact of the dominant English on Russian proficiency of heritage students is similar to most languages

35 Signs of shift Immigrant Russian children usually speak Russian almost exclusively until they start school at the age of 5, when they begin to switch to the dominant English. Then after the age of 18, almost 50% reported exclusive use of English and very few reported use of Russian exclusively, which shows the shift away from Russian to English

36 Signs of maintenance The biggest indication of the motivation to preserve and advance Russian-language proficiency in the immigrant population is the heritage learner phenomenon and the growing number of these students at the college level In 2007 Russian President Vladimir Putin launched a new organization called Fond Russkij Mir (The Russian World Foundation). The main purpose is to promote and support the study of the Russian language and culture abroad. Also a goal is to help Russian speakers abroad maintain their language proficiency so the program is aimed at Russian heritage speakers worldwide

37 Conclusions The 1 st wave of 20 th century Russian immigrants preserved Russian better than the other waves b/c only the 1 st wave left Russia fully intending to return College students who grew up in Russian-speaking families are well disposed to preserving the language and most want to teach Russian to their children Researchers think that it is unlikely that the Russian language will survive beyond the 2 nd generation in the US. The dominance of English throughout the world and challenges to bilingualism in the US educational system will likely overpower the good intentions of a small number of families and people who think they can preserve their home language and culture

A Flood of Immigrants

A Flood of Immigrants Immigration A Flood of Immigrants Why did many people immigrate to the United States during this period? Immigration to the United States shifted in the late 1800s. Before 1865, most immigrants other than

More information

the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question: calling themselves communists gained

the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question: calling themselves communists gained Essential Question: How did Vladimir Lenin & the Bolsheviks transform Russia during the Russian Revolution in 1917? Warm Up Question: Based on what you know about communism, why do you think people calling

More information

Unit II Migration. Unit II Population and Migration 21

Unit II Migration. Unit II Population and Migration 21 Unit II Migration 91. The type of migration in which a person chooses to migrate is called A) chain migration. B) step migration. C) forced migration. D) voluntary migration. E. channelized migration.

More information

Population Table 1. Population of Estonia and change in population by census year

Population Table 1. Population of Estonia and change in population by census year Population 1881 2000 A country s population usually grows or diminishes due to the influence of two factors: rate of natural increase, which is the difference between births and deaths, and rate of mechanical

More information

5. Trends in Ukrainian Migration and Shortterm

5. Trends in Ukrainian Migration and Shortterm 68 5. Trends in Ukrainian Migration and Shortterm Work Trips Sergei I. Pirozhkov * Introduction This report presents the results of a first-ever research project on migration from Ukraine for the purpose

More information

Changes in Russia, Asia, & the Middle East TOWARD A GLOBAL COMMUNITY (1900 PRESENT)

Changes in Russia, Asia, & the Middle East TOWARD A GLOBAL COMMUNITY (1900 PRESENT) Changes in Russia, Asia, & the Middle East TOWARD A GLOBAL COMMUNITY (1900 PRESENT) RUSSIA Toward the end of WWI Russia entered a civil war between Lenin s Bolsheviks (the Communist Red Army) and armies

More information

Creating Effective Messaging for Hispanic Families

Creating Effective Messaging for Hispanic Families + Creating Effective Messaging for Hispanic Families Presented by Laura Sonderup, Director Hispanidad October 17, 2012 2 This is a community that wants to know you are willing to be there for the long

More information

Experiences in Coming to America By Leon Boonin. Boonin Family Papers collection [#3186]. Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

Experiences in Coming to America By Leon Boonin. Boonin Family Papers collection [#3186]. Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Experiences in Coming to America By Leon Boonin Boonin Family Papers collection [#3186]. Historical Society of Pennsylvania. Experiences in Coming to America In the early-twentieth century, the methods

More information

The Largest mass movement in Human History - From 1880 to 1921, a record-setting 23 million immigrants arrived on America s shores in what one

The Largest mass movement in Human History - From 1880 to 1921, a record-setting 23 million immigrants arrived on America s shores in what one The Largest mass movement in Human History - From 1880 to 1921, a record-setting 23 million immigrants arrived on America s shores in what one scholar called the largest mass movement in human history.

More information

Chapter Russia and Central Europe

Chapter Russia and Central Europe Chapter 17-18 Russia and Central Europe Natural Environments Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus cover 12% of the world s land area. Russia is the world s largest country. The Siberian rivers (Ob, Yenisey, and

More information

Chapter 5 - Canada s Immigration Laws and Policies By: Jacklyn Kirk

Chapter 5 - Canada s Immigration Laws and Policies By: Jacklyn Kirk Chapter 5 - Canada s Immigration Laws and Policies By: Jacklyn Kirk 1. What is immigration? -Immigration is the introduction of new people into a habitat or population. 2. What are refugees? -Refugees

More information

Page 1 of 5 DP02 SELECTED SOCIAL CHARACTERISTICS IN THE UNITED STATES 2013 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates Although the American Community Survey (ACS) produces population, demographic and housing

More information

SET UP YOUR NEW (LAST!) TOC

SET UP YOUR NEW (LAST!) TOC SET UP YOUR NEW (LAST!) TOC DIVIDE THE BERLIN AIRLIFT & UNITED NATIONS BOX IN HALF AS SHOWN BELOW Learning Goal 1: Describe the causes and effects of the Cold War and explain how the Korean War, Vietnam

More information

Heritage Language Research: Lessons Learned and New Directions

Heritage Language Research: Lessons Learned and New Directions Heritage Language Research: Lessons Learned and New Directions Terrence G. Wiley President, Center for Applied Linguistics Professor Emeritus, Arizona State University Overview This presentation will provide

More information

Why Global Competence?

Why Global Competence? Why Global Competence? Students want to know more about the world. Nine out of ten students want to know more about the rest of the world; they believe it will be important to their futures. Separate research

More information

Ellis Island - The island of hope and tears Some were sent back home

Ellis Island - The island of hope and tears Some were sent back home The new country Ellis Island - The island of hope and tears Ellis Island, a small island just outside of Manhattan in New York, and only a stone s throw from the Statue of Liberty, holds an important place

More information

Tell us what you think. Provide feedback to help make American Community Survey data more useful for you.

Tell us what you think. Provide feedback to help make American Community Survey data more useful for you. DP02 SELECTED SOCIAL CHARACTERISTICS IN THE UNITED STATES 2016 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates Supporting documentation on code lists, subject definitions, data accuracy, and statistical testing

More information

2011 National Household Survey Profile on the Town of Richmond Hill: 1st Release

2011 National Household Survey Profile on the Town of Richmond Hill: 1st Release 2011 National Household Survey Profile on the Town of Richmond Hill: 1st Release Every five years the Government of Canada through Statistics Canada undertakes a nationwide Census. The purpose of the Census

More information

Table of Contents. Language Policy in the USSR. Part 1: General Overview USSR and Lenin's Language Policy. Republics can be grouped as.

Table of Contents. Language Policy in the USSR. Part 1: General Overview USSR and Lenin's Language Policy. Republics can be grouped as. Table of Contents Language Policy in the USSR Before, During and After the Soviet Union Eugenie Braun Lucca Möller Barbara Sohn-Travaglia Flags courtesy of www.theodora.com/flags used with permission"

More information

UNIT 6 THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION

UNIT 6 THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION UNIT 6 THE RUSSIAN REVOLUTION I; LONG-TERM CAUSES A. AUTOCRACY OF THE CZAR 1. Censorship 2. Religious and ethnic intolerance 3. Political oppression I; LONG-TERM CAUSES B. ECONOMIC PROBLEMS 1. Russia began

More information

Older Immigrants in the United States By Aaron Terrazas Migration Policy Institute

Older Immigrants in the United States By Aaron Terrazas Migration Policy Institute Older Immigrants in the United States By Aaron Terrazas Migration Policy Institute May 2009 After declining steadily between 1960 and 1990, the number of older immigrants (those age 65 and over) in the

More information

Migration Information Source - Chinese Immigrants in the United States

Migration Information Source - Chinese Immigrants in the United States Pagina 1 di 8 Chinese Immigrants in the United States By Aaron Terrazas, Jeanne Batalova Migration Policy Institute May 6, 2010 The United States is home to about 1.6 million Chinese immigrants (including

More information

A Nation of Immigrants. Discrimination Emigration Push Potato Blight Push American Letters

A Nation of Immigrants. Discrimination Emigration Push Potato Blight Push American Letters Immigration A Nation of Immigrants Discrimination Emigration Push Potato Blight Push American Letters A Nation of Immigrants In a couple of years US population will be 300 million All are immigrants or

More information

Welcome, WHAP Comrades!

Welcome, WHAP Comrades! Welcome, WHAP Comrades! Monday, April 2, 2018 Have paper and something to write with out for notes and be ready to begin! This Week s WHAP Agenda MONDAY 4/3: Russian and Chinese Revolutions TUESDAY 4/4:

More information

This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and

This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and Glossary of Terms This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and immigrant integration terms utilized in this report and in the field. The terms are organized in alphabetical order

More information

Michigan: State-by-State Immigration Trends Introduction Foreign-Born Population Educational Attainment

Michigan: State-by-State Immigration Trends Introduction Foreign-Born Population Educational Attainment Michigan: State-by-State Immigration Trends Courtesy of the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota Prepared in 2012 for the Task Force on US Economic Competitiveness at Risk:

More information

Backgrounder. This report finds that immigrants have been hit somewhat harder by the current recession than have nativeborn

Backgrounder. This report finds that immigrants have been hit somewhat harder by the current recession than have nativeborn Backgrounder Center for Immigration Studies May 2009 Trends in Immigrant and Native Employment By Steven A. Camarota and Karen Jensenius This report finds that immigrants have been hit somewhat harder

More information

NAME: TASKS (directions) Immigration

NAME: TASKS (directions) Immigration NAME: TASKS (directions): 1. While you are reading, circle the unknown or impressive words, highlight supporting details, and write down main ideas in the margins. Main ideas are sometimes hard to figure

More information

In the News: Speaking English in the United States

In the News: Speaking English in the United States Focus Areas Environment HIV/AIDS Population Trends Reproductive Health Topics Aging Education Family Planning Fertility Gender Health Marriage/Family Migration Mortality Policy Poverty Race/Ethnicity Youth

More information

Bell Activity. What does it feel like to be in a group where one person insists on always getting his or her own way? How might other members respond?

Bell Activity. What does it feel like to be in a group where one person insists on always getting his or her own way? How might other members respond? History of Russia Objectives Know important events and people from the history of tsarist Russia. Know the reason for the rise and fall of the Soviet Union. Explain the cause and effects of the Russian

More information

February 1, William T Fujioka, Chief Executive Officer. Dean C. Logan, Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk

February 1, William T Fujioka, Chief Executive Officer. Dean C. Logan, Registrar-Recorder/County Clerk January 31, 2012 Page 1 of 13 TO: Supervisor Zev Yaroslavsky, Chair Supervisor Gloria Molina Supervisor Mark Ridley-Thomas Supervisor Don Knabe Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich William T Fujioka, Chief

More information

Russia Continued. Competing Revolutions and the Birth of the USSR

Russia Continued. Competing Revolutions and the Birth of the USSR Russia Continued Competing Revolutions and the Birth of the USSR Review: 3 Main Causes of Russian Revolution of 1917 Peasant Poverty Farmers: indebted and barely above subsistence level Outdated agricultural

More information

3 Themes in Russian History

3 Themes in Russian History History of Russia 3 Themes in Russian History 1. Expansion east and west From 800 AD to 1900s the land Russia controlled increased greatly because of their powerful leaders 2. Harsh treatment of common

More information

HOLT CHAPTER 22. Section 1: Capitalism Section 2: Socialism Section 3: Communism HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON

HOLT CHAPTER 22. Section 1: Capitalism Section 2: Socialism Section 3: Communism HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON CHAPTER 22 Section 1: Capitalism Section 2: Socialism Section 3: Communism Section 1: Capitalism Objectives: What are the four factors of production? In what way is a free-market economy an essential aspect

More information

ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS

ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS Jennifer M. Ortman Department of Sociology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Presented at the Annual Meeting of the

More information

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION Push Factors Push Factors= Things that force/ push people out of a place or land. Drought or famine Political revolutions or wars Religious persecution Economic struggles Pull

More information

Revolution and Nationalism

Revolution and Nationalism Revolution and Nationalism 1900-1939 Revolutions in Russia Section 1 Long-term social unrest in Russia exploded in revolution, and ushered in the first Communist government. Czars Resist Change Romanov

More information

Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s.

Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s. Objectives Identify the reasons immigration to the United States increased in the late 1800s. Describe the difficulties immigrants faced adjusting to their new lives. Discuss how immigrants assimilated

More information

GCSE MARKING SCHEME SUMMER 2016 HISTORY - STUDY IN-DEPTH CHINA UNDER MAO ZEDONG, /05. WJEC CBAC Ltd.

GCSE MARKING SCHEME SUMMER 2016 HISTORY - STUDY IN-DEPTH CHINA UNDER MAO ZEDONG, /05. WJEC CBAC Ltd. GCSE MARKING SCHEME SUMMER 2016 HISTORY - STUDY IN-DEPTH CHINA UNDER MAO ZEDONG, 1949-1976 4271/05 WJEC CBAC Ltd. INTRODUCTION This marking scheme was used by WJEC for the 2016 examination. It was finalised

More information

Estonia: Diversity. Bad Laer, December 2015 Ruta Pels Leonid Smulskiy

Estonia: Diversity. Bad Laer, December 2015 Ruta Pels Leonid Smulskiy Estonia: Diversity Bad Laer, December 2015 Ruta Pels Leonid Smulskiy Population According to the initial estimates of Statistics Estonia, the population number of Estonia as at 1 January 2015 was 1,312,300,

More information

AMERICA AND THE WORLD. Chapter 13 Section 1 US History

AMERICA AND THE WORLD. Chapter 13 Section 1 US History AMERICA AND THE WORLD Chapter 13 Section 1 US History AMERICA AND THE WORLD THE RISE OF DICTATORS MAIN IDEA Dictators took control of the governments of Italy, the Soviet Union, Germany, and Japan End

More information

Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition. by Charles Hauss. Chapter 9: Russia

Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition. by Charles Hauss. Chapter 9: Russia Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition by Charles Hauss Chapter 9: Russia Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, students should be able to: describe

More information

Immigration and Discrimination. Effects of the Industrial Revolution

Immigration and Discrimination. Effects of the Industrial Revolution Immigration and Discrimination Effects of the Industrial Revolution Types of Immigration Push problems that cause people to leave their homeland. Pull factors that draw people to another place. Where

More information

Immigrants and the Direct Care Workforce

Immigrants and the Direct Care Workforce JUNE 2017 RESEARCH BRIEF Immigrants and the Direct Care Workforce BY ROBERT ESPINOZA Immigrants are a significant part of the U.S. economy and the direct care workforce, providing hands-on care to older

More information

Selected National Demographic Trends

Selected National Demographic Trends Selected National Demographic Trends Tawara D. Goode Director, Georgetown University National Center for Cultural Competence Assistant Professor, Center for Child and Human Development Spring 2016 University

More information

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reform and Reaction in Russia

TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Reform and Reaction in Russia Reform and Reaction in Russia Objectives Describe major obstacles to progress in Russia. Explain why tsars followed a cycle of absolutism, reform, and reaction. Understand why the problems of industrialization

More information

Why did revolution occur in Russia in March 1917? Why did Lenin and the Bolsheviks launch the November revolution?

Why did revolution occur in Russia in March 1917? Why did Lenin and the Bolsheviks launch the November revolution? Two Revolutions 1 in Russia Why did revolution occur in Russia in March 1917? Why did Lenin and the Bolsheviks launch the November revolution? How did the Communists defeat their opponents in Russia s

More information

In Every Generation: Descendants Carry on the Work

In Every Generation: Descendants Carry on the Work In Every Generation: Descendants Carry on the Work Melissa Borja, College of Staten Island (Moderator) Patrick Barry, Catholic Charities, Diocese of Camden Louise Sandburg, The Jewish Center's Interfaith

More information

2010 CENSUS POPULATION REAPPORTIONMENT DATA

2010 CENSUS POPULATION REAPPORTIONMENT DATA Southern Tier East Census Monograph Series Report 11-1 January 2011 2010 CENSUS POPULATION REAPPORTIONMENT DATA The United States Constitution, Article 1, Section 2, requires a decennial census for the

More information

Emigrating Israeli Families Identification Using Official Israeli Databases

Emigrating Israeli Families Identification Using Official Israeli Databases Emigrating Israeli Families Identification Using Official Israeli Databases Mark Feldman Director of Labour Statistics Sector (ICBS) In the Presentation Overview of Israel Identifying emigrating families:

More information

Test Examples. Vertical Integration

Test Examples. Vertical Integration Test Examples Vertical Integration Andrew Carnegie used vertical integration when he bought out his suppliers. He not only owned the steel company but also owned the coal fields, iron mines, ore freighters

More information

9+91S 21+79Q 8.8% New Americans in the Siouxland Tri-State Region 20.8% The immigrant population increased 12.3%.

9+91S 21+79Q 8.8% New Americans in the Siouxland Tri-State Region 20.8% The immigrant population increased 12.3%. New Americans in the Siouxland Tri-State Region A Snapshot of the Demographic and Economic Contributions of Immigrants 1 POPULATION GROWTH 9+91S 8.8% Immigrant share of the population in metro Sioux City

More information

Immigration Policy Brief August 2006

Immigration Policy Brief August 2006 Immigration Policy Brief August 2006 Last updated August 16, 2006 The Growth and Reach of Immigration New Census Bureau Data Underscore Importance of Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Force Introduction: by

More information

NEW AMERICANS IN ANCHORAGE

NEW AMERICANS IN ANCHORAGE NEW AMERICANS IN ANCHORAGE A SNAPSHOT OF THE DEMOGRAPHIC AND ECONOMIC CONTRIBUTIONS OF IMMIGRANTS IN THE CITY OF ANCHORAGE 1 SPENDING POWER AND TAX CONTRIBUTIONS In 2014, foreign-born residents in Anchorage

More information

Chapter Inquiry- How did the massive immigration to Canada near the turn of the century affect the complex identity of our country?

Chapter Inquiry- How did the massive immigration to Canada near the turn of the century affect the complex identity of our country? Chapter 11- Encouraging Immigration Chapter Inquiry- How did the massive immigration to Canada near the turn of the century affect the complex identity of our country? A. Vocabulary 1.Communal lifestyle

More information

Who was Mikhail Gorbachev?

Who was Mikhail Gorbachev? Who was Mikhail Gorbachev? Gorbachev was born in 1931 in the village of Privolnoye in Stavropol province. His family were poor farmers and, at the age of thirteen, Mikhail began working on the farm. In

More information

3. USA, essays to learn BUT only 1 to write in the exam

3. USA, essays to learn BUT only 1 to write in the exam 3. USA, 1918-1968 5 essays to learn BUT only 1 to write in the exam Issue 1 An Evaluation Of The Reasons For Changing Attitudes To Immigration Factor 1: Prejudice And Racism Factor 2: Isolationism & The

More information

Brazilians. imagine all the people. Brazilians in Boston

Brazilians. imagine all the people. Brazilians in Boston Brazilians imagine all the people Brazilians in Boston imagine all the people is a series of publications produced by the Boston Redevelopment Authority for the Mayor s Office of Immigrant Advancement.

More information

New Immigrants. Chapter 15 Section 1 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger

New Immigrants. Chapter 15 Section 1 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger New Immigrants Chapter 15 Section 1 Life at the Turn of the 20th Century Riddlebarger Changing Patterns of Immigration Why did they come? A. Personal freedom B. Religious persecution C. Political turmoil

More information

Media system and journalistic cultures in Latvia: impact on integration processes

Media system and journalistic cultures in Latvia: impact on integration processes Media system and journalistic cultures in Latvia: impact on integration processes Ilze Šulmane, Mag.soc.sc., University of Latvia, Dep.of Communication Studies The main point of my presentation: the possibly

More information

Institute for Public Policy and Economic Analysis

Institute for Public Policy and Economic Analysis Institute for Public Policy and Economic Analysis The Institute for Public Policy and Economic Analysis at Eastern Washington University will convey university expertise and sponsor research in social,

More information

The Interwar Years

The Interwar Years The Interwar Years 1919-1939 Essential Understanding: A period of uneven prosperity in the decade following World War I (the 1920s = the Roaring 20s ) was followed by worldwide depression in the 1930s.

More information

THEORIES OF ASSIMILATION - LeMay Ch. 2

THEORIES OF ASSIMILATION - LeMay Ch. 2 THEORIES OF ASSIMILATION - LeMay Ch. 2 What is assimilation? Cultural norms: food, clothing, etc. Job Market Outgroup marriage Identification as hyphenated Americans Less prejudice by majority No discrimination

More information

Chapter 7: Rejecting Liberalism. Understandings of Communism

Chapter 7: Rejecting Liberalism. Understandings of Communism Chapter 7: Rejecting Liberalism Understandings of Communism * in communist ideology, the collective is more important than the individual. Communists also believe that the well-being of individuals is

More information

# Lougheed Hwy, Port Coquitlam.

# Lougheed Hwy, Port Coquitlam. Coquitlam Learning Opportunity Centre 104-2748 Lougheed Hwy Port Coquitlam, BC V3B 6P2 Phone: (604) 945-4211 Course Name: History 12 Course Format: Online, Flexible-Paced Location: Coquitlam Learning Opportunity

More information

Chapters 30 and 31: The Interwar Period ( )

Chapters 30 and 31: The Interwar Period ( ) Chapters 30 and 31: The Interwar Period (1919-1938) Postwar Germany Unstable democracies Weimar Republic in Germany Democratic government formed after WWI Was blamed for signing Treaty of Versailles Cost

More information

IDAHO AT A GLANCE. Community Impacts of Dairy Workers. Highlights. Background. May 2017, Vol. 8, No. 3. McClure Center for Public Policy Research

IDAHO AT A GLANCE. Community Impacts of Dairy Workers. Highlights. Background. May 2017, Vol. 8, No. 3. McClure Center for Public Policy Research McClure Center for Public Policy Research IDAHO AT A GLANCE Community Impacts of Dairy Workers May 2017, Vol. 8, No. 3 Highlights With its predominantly Hispanic workforce, south central s dairy industry

More information

THE CROATIAN DIASPORA IN AUSTRALIA

THE CROATIAN DIASPORA IN AUSTRALIA Iseljen_knjb 11.06.14 10:10 Page 25 THE CROATIAN DIASPORA IN AUSTRALIA Beverly MERCER, Ambassador of Australia to the Republic of Croatia As you will all be aware, Australia is a very multicultural society.

More information

General Overview of Communism & the Russian Revolution. AP World History Chapter 27b The Rise and Fall of World Communism (1917 Present)

General Overview of Communism & the Russian Revolution. AP World History Chapter 27b The Rise and Fall of World Communism (1917 Present) General Overview of Communism & the Russian Revolution AP World History Chapter 27b The Rise and Fall of World Communism (1917 Present) Communism: A General Overview Socialism = the belief that the economy

More information

RUSSIA AND EURASIA REVIEW: A journal of information and analysis

RUSSIA AND EURASIA REVIEW: A journal of information and analysis Tuesday, 4 February 2003 - Russia and Eurasia Review, Volume 2, Issue 3 RUSSIA AND EURASIA REVIEW: A journal of information and analysis Census: Ukraine, more Ukrainian By Taras Kuzio CENSUS: UKRAINE,

More information

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION

IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION IMMIGRATION AND URBANIZATION New Immigrants New Immigrants= Southern and Eastern Europeans during 1870s until WWI. Came from Ireland, Germany, Italy, Greece, Poland, Hungary and Russia. Often unskilled,

More information

Factories double from Trans-Siberian Railway finally finished in More and more people work in factories

Factories double from Trans-Siberian Railway finally finished in More and more people work in factories World history Factories double from 1863-1900 Trans-Siberian Railway finally finished in 1916 More and more people work in factories o Terrible conditions, child labor, very low pay o Unions were illegal

More information

Cultural Frames: An Analytical Model

Cultural Frames: An Analytical Model Figure 1.1 Cultural Frames: An Analytical Model Hyper-Selectivity/ Hypo-Selectivity Ethnic Capital Tangible and Intangible Resources Host Society Public Institutional Resources The Stereotype Promise/Threat

More information

Bell Work: How would you go about planning this essay? 4 minutes!

Bell Work: How would you go about planning this essay? 4 minutes! Essay Question: How far were the economic reforms of Witte the most important development within Russia between 1881 and 1903? Bell Work: How would you go about planning this essay? 4 minutes! X FACTOR:

More information

Divorce risks of immigrants in Sweden

Divorce risks of immigrants in Sweden Divorce risks of immigrants in Sweden Gunnar Andersson, Kirk Scott Abstract Migration is a stressful life event that may be related to subsequent marital instability. However, while the demographic dynamics

More information

History of immigration to the United States

History of immigration to the United States History of immigration to the United States Immigration 1850 to 1930 "From the Old to the New World" shows German emigrants boarding a steamer in Hamburg, to New York.Harperʼs Weekly, (New York) November

More information

Name: Target Grade: Key Questions:

Name: Target Grade: Key Questions: Name: Target Grade: Key Questions: 1. What was the main cause of the Cold War? 2. Did Peaceful co-existence exist, 1950-60? 3. How close was the World to war in the 1960s? 1 Enquiry Question: Why was the

More information

The Russian Revolution. Peace, Bread, Land, Almost

The Russian Revolution. Peace, Bread, Land, Almost Name: Period: 1 2 5 6 8 The Russian Revolution VI Peace, Bread, Land, Almost Purpose: Could the October Revolution have succeeded without the pragmatism of Lenin and ideology of Trotsky? Part One: Russian

More information

Views of Non-Formal Education among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon

Views of Non-Formal Education among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon Views of Non-Formal Education among Syrian Refugees in Lebanon September 2017 Syrian refugee children in northern Lebanon; credit DFID 1 This report is made possible by the generous support of the American

More information

Cruel, oppressive rule of the Czars for almost 100 years Social unrest for decades Ruthless treatment of peasants Small revolts amongst students and

Cruel, oppressive rule of the Czars for almost 100 years Social unrest for decades Ruthless treatment of peasants Small revolts amongst students and Cruel, oppressive rule of the Czars for almost 100 years Social unrest for decades Ruthless treatment of peasants Small revolts amongst students and soldiers that resulted in secret revolutionary groups

More information

History of the Baltic States: From Independence to Independence the 20 th century Part II

History of the Baltic States: From Independence to Independence the 20 th century Part II History of the Baltic States: From Independence to Independence the 20 th century Part II Lecturer: Tõnis Saarts Institute of Political Science and Public Administration Spring 2009 First Soviet Year In

More information

The Cold War. Chapter 30

The Cold War. Chapter 30 The Cold War Chapter 30 Two Side Face Off in Europe Each superpower formed its own military alliance NATO USA and western Europe Warsaw Pact USSR and eastern Europe Berlin Wall 1961 Anti-Soviet revolts

More information

World War II Home Front

World War II Home Front World War II Home Front 1941-1945 JAPANESE AMERICANS 100k First and Second generation Japanese Americans were placed in concentration camps Rooted in anti Japanese propaganda Japanese were labeled a security

More information

Hanna Sutela Senior researcher, PhD Population and Social Statistics Statistics Finland

Hanna Sutela Senior researcher, PhD Population and Social Statistics Statistics Finland Hanna Sutela Senior researcher, PhD Population and Social Statistics Statistics Finland hanna.sutela@stat.fi Gender employment gaps of the population of foreign background in Finland Background In 2014,

More information

Russia and Beyond

Russia and Beyond Russia 1894-1945 and Beyond Why begin here? George Orwell wrote his novel during WWII between November 1943-February 1944 in order to, in his words, expose the Soviet myth in a story that could be easily

More information

Indian Migration to the Global North in the Americas: The United States

Indian Migration to the Global North in the Americas: The United States Chapter 1 Indian Migration to the Global North in the Americas: The United States The multicultural, multiracial and diverse character of North American society reflects the consequences of significant

More information

Immigrant Communities of Philadelphia: Spatial Patterns and Revitalization

Immigrant Communities of Philadelphia: Spatial Patterns and Revitalization University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Reports Social Science Studio 1-1-2015 Immigrant Communities of Philadelphia: Spatial Patterns and Revitalization Jake Riley University of Pennsylvania, rjake@sas.upenn.edu

More information

Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration. Chapter 15, Section 1

Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration. Chapter 15, Section 1 Immigrants and Urbanization: Immigration Chapter 15, Section 1 United States of America Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free. The wretched refuse of your teeming

More information

Chapter 1: The Demographics of McLennan County

Chapter 1: The Demographics of McLennan County Chapter 1: The Demographics of McLennan County General Population Since 2000, the Texas population has grown by more than 2.7 million residents (approximately 15%), bringing the total population of the

More information

DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE Skagit County, Washington. Prepared by: Skagit Council of Governments 204 West Montgomery Street, Mount Vernon, WA 98273

DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE Skagit County, Washington. Prepared by: Skagit Council of Governments 204 West Montgomery Street, Mount Vernon, WA 98273 DEMOGRAPHIC PROFILE 2013 Skagit County, Washington Prepared by: Skagit Council of Governments 204 West Montgomery Street, Mount Vernon, WA 98273 CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction... 1 Persons and

More information

Ch 13-4 Learning Goal/Content Statement

Ch 13-4 Learning Goal/Content Statement Ch 13-4 Learning Goal/Content Statement Explain how the consequences of World War I and the worldwide depression set the stage for the rise of totalitarianism, aggressive Axis expansion and the policy

More information

Peruvians in the United States

Peruvians in the United States Peruvians in the United States 1980 2008 Center for Latin American, Caribbean & Latino Studies Graduate Center City University of New York 365 Fifth Avenue Room 5419 New York, New York 10016 212-817-8438

More information

Name: Group: 404- Date:

Name: Group: 404- Date: Name: Group: 404- Date: Notes 2.2 Chapter 2: 1896-1945: Nationalisms and the Autonomy of Canada Section 2: Immigration to Canada in the late 19 th -early 20 th centuries Pages that correspond to this presentation

More information

Revolution and Nationalism

Revolution and Nationalism Revolution and Nationalism 1900-1939 Revolutions in Russia Section 1 Long- term social unrest in Russia exploded in revolution, and ushered in the first Communist government. Czars Resist Change Romanov

More information

THROUGH ELLIS ISLAND AND ANGEL ISLAND. How was life as an immigrant coming to the USA

THROUGH ELLIS ISLAND AND ANGEL ISLAND. How was life as an immigrant coming to the USA THROUGH ELLIS ISLAND AND ANGEL ISLAND How was life as an immigrant coming to the USA Why they immigrated? Push Factors: Problems that caused people to move Irish Potato Famine Lack of arable land Religious

More information

IS - International Studies

IS - International Studies IS - International Studies INTERNATIONAL STUDIES Courses IS 600. Research Methods in International Studies. Lecture 3 hours; 3 credits. Interdisciplinary quantitative techniques applicable to the study

More information

Module 20.2: The Soviet Union Under Stalin

Module 20.2: The Soviet Union Under Stalin Module 20.2: The Soviet Union Under Stalin Terms and People command economy an economy in which government officials make all basic economic decisions collectives large farms owned and operated by peasants

More information

The impact of the Racial Equality Directive: a survey of trade unions and employers in the Member States of the European Union. Poland.

The impact of the Racial Equality Directive: a survey of trade unions and employers in the Member States of the European Union. Poland. The impact of the Racial Equality Directive: a survey of trade unions and employers in the Member States of the European Union Poland Julia Kubisa DISCLAIMER: Please note that country reports of each Member

More information

Name: Group: 404- Date:

Name: Group: 404- Date: Name: Group: 404- Date: Notes 2.4 Chapter 2: 1896-1945: Nationalisms and the Autonomy of Canada Section 4: Immigration to Canada in the late 19 th -early 20 th centuries Pages that correspond to this presentation

More information

RUSSIA S LEADERS. Click map to view Russia overview video.

RUSSIA S LEADERS. Click map to view Russia overview video. RUSSIA S LEADERS Click map to view Russia overview video. CZAR NICHOLAS 1894-1917 Czar Nicholas Romanov II the last of the czars. Made attempts to modernize, not successful Russia defeated in Russo-Japanese

More information