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NOTES FOR FUTURE REFERENCE


-19- Daniel Tsang: Banning the "psychopathic personality" from the U.S., 1950-1990

Gender The 1952 McCarran-Walter Immigration act was particularly problematic in how it applied to foreigners attracted to their own gender. The “red scare” era of the 1950s was a period of national insecurity about homosexuals, and Congress found a way to exclude “homosexuals and other sex perverts” under the provision banning entry of aliens “afflicted with psychopathic personality.” on september, 15, 1975, while a graduate student at the University of Michigan, I asked Gerald ford, who was in ann arbor to kick off his presidential campaign, why gay people were excluded from the U.s. he promised to have his aides “look into it.” This anti-gay exclusion (Item 55) remained in effect for decades until the 1990 Immigration act removed the provision. non-citizen same-sex partners of U.s. citizens continue to be barred from entry, however, unlike unmarried heterosexual partners. Lionel Cantú, a UCI doctoral candidate in social relations, focused his research on gay exclusion, funded by the social science research Council’s sexuality fellowship Program and the ford foundation. his 1999 dissertation Border Crossings: Mexican Men and the Sexuality of Migration would later be revised as Queer Migrations: Sexuality, U.S. Citizenship, and Border Crossings (University of Minnesota Press, 2005) (Item 54). It was published posthumously after his sudden death in 2002 while he was a faculty member at UC santa Cruz. a report issued jointly by human rights Watch and Immigration equality in 2006, titled Family, Unvalued: Discrimination, Denial, and the Fate of Binational Same-Sex Couples under U.S. Law (Item 51), credits Cantú for his “groundbreaking” research and former UCI sociologist nancy naples for continuing his legacy. Women’s immigration is another vibrant research area, in a field where popular and academic attention often primarily focuses on immigrant men. as sociologist Pierrette hondagneu-sotelo has pointed out, research on gender and immigration has moved from non-existent, to studying women immigrants, to its current focus on viewing gendered social relations as part and parcel of immigrant lives.viii studies like those on display seek to document and address the varied and gendered lives of immigrants (Items 52 and 53). 51. Family, Unvalued: Discrimination, Denial, and the Fate of Binational Same-Sex Couples Under U.S. Law.

new york: human rights Watch and Immigration equality, 2006. 

52. denise a. segura and Patricia Zavella, editors.

Women and Migration in the U.S.-Mexico Borderlands: A Reader. 

durham: duke University Press, 2007. 53. Jen’nan Ghazal read.

Culture, Class, and Work Among Arab-American Women. new york: 

Lfb scholarly Publishing, 2004. 54. eithne Luibhéid and Lionel Cantú, Jr., editors.

Queer Migrations: Sexuality, U.S. Citizenship, and Border Crossings. 

Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2005. 55. “Let gays in. global protests, 26 september, 1981.”

Poster.  Loaned by daniel C. Tsang. 

viii

hondagneu-sotelo, Pierrette.  Gendering Migration: Not for ‘Feminists Only’—and Not 

Only in the Household. Princeton University Center for Migration and development Working Paper #05-02f (January 2005).

John R. Yoakam

"Gods or Monsters: A Critique of Representations in Film and Literature of Relationships Between Older Gay Men and Younger Men"

Page Range: 65 - 80 DOI: 10.1300/J041 v13 n04 _08

Copyright Year: 2001

Contributors: John R. Yoakam PhD, Assistant Professor, Department of Social Work, College of St. Benedict, St. Joseph, MN, 55403, USA, jyoakam@csbsju.edu



KEEP THIS stuff below from WIKIPEDIA

Insert: – — … ° ≈ ≠ ≤ ≥ ± − × ÷ ← → · § Sign your username: Jnk 10:41, 3 April 2008 (PDT)

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Let me just mention that the link text donesn't necessarily need to be the same as the article title. I can link to Jim Kolbe's article for example by typing [[Jim Kolbe|Jim Kolbe's article]] (text before vertical bar is what it links to, text after the vertical bar is what it says on the page). You can also automatically sign your name when you write something on the discussion pages (like I did below) by typing four tilde characters (~~~~). The will turn into a signature stamp when you save or preview.

Ebukva 12:30, 8 November 2007 (PST)

I was here. JNK Jnk 12:58, 19 November 2007 (PST)


Hello and welcome to OutHistory.org.

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Ebukva 14:31, 10 January 2008 (PST)