Borders of Salt and Rock
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On the Pacific Coast, the transition from boundary survey to day-to-day control took half a century. Canadian and American dependence on Indigenous labor limited the restrictions they could implement. By the mid-1880s, the immigration of hundreds of thousands of settlers shifted the balance of power. Both governments drove the Coast Salish out of the work force and imposed a new geographic order on top of existing Indigenous ones. At the same time, Chinese immigration drove grassroots pressure to reform federal border controls. In the wake of riots, protest, and vigilante justice, the United States passed Chinese Exclusion Acts in 1882 and 1888 and Canada developed a head tax.
2021 ◽
Vol 33
(2)
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pp. 382-411
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1971 ◽
Vol 36
(2)
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pp. 277-279
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1959 ◽
Vol 8
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pp. 4-11
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2010 ◽
Vol 17
(11)
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pp. 1729-1733
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