The abolition of the White Australia Policy opened the way for a new immigration policy and improved relationships with Australian’s Asian neighbours…
The book I read was called Rush. The situation in the story is that a young kid named Jake King is an adrenaline junkie in a small town called Brockton. Brockton is nestled in California's san Limos Valley.The whole town hates Jake Because of how here is always trying to do something dangerous like diving off waterfalls or rock climbing. The main conflict in the story is how Jake wants to be a part of this club called The Immortals where they do a bunch of crazy things like jumping into fires along with many other things. however a lot of his family and friends don't want to be a part of it and it's very difficult to be a part of the club also he's already disliked by a lot of the town it's even more difficult for him to get in.…
We had some questions about the Gold Rush, and we researched about them. We found lots of cool and interesting facts and were able to find the information that answered our questions. We would like to share these with you. So don’t bother going to research as a way to get your facts because our presentation has it all. Some of our questions were Who were some women in the Gold Rush and how did they affect it? Who were some successful women and how did they make their money? What was the inflation of goods during the Gold Rush and did it make people mad? How did Hydrolic mining affect the environment around it? And What was the journey like to come to California?. Now let’s get…
The Chinese came to the United States for opportunities, thus they could bring affluence when they return back to their homes. Referring back to the 19th century of China, Qing dynasty, those who had private business or worked for the…
there was an immigrant that wanted to start a new life. The trades became the center of wealth…
In two similarly heart wrenching tales of struggle and perseverance, the novel Rain of Gold and the film A Better Life put on display the stories of two families working hard to stay together and make their living. Themes such as family, hard work, and discrimination are common to both stories in which the ideas of love and hardship are closely examined. Through the exploration of these major ideas, two beautiful stories emerge to explain the power of family and devotion, the strain of challenges, and the pain and fear caused by prejudice and discrimination.…
The rapid growth of the western Chinese city of Xi 'an can accredit much of its success to the “Great Opening of the West” policy initiated in 2000, yet the policy may have never met fruition without the intricate rural-urban dynamic in place in Xi 'an (Loyalka, 2012, p. 5). Loyalka 's book Eating Bitterness examines eight Chinese families affected by growth of Xi 'an and Xi 'an 's High-Tech Zone, providing insight into the diverse daily lives of the families as well as the constantly evolving codependent relationship between the city and countryside. The city and the countryside are connected by the movement of people, space, money and culture, but Chinese families remain the strongest link as they enable these transfers. This heavy traffic between the the rural and urban cause a strain on the rural Chinese family, yet it is because of these hardworking, persevering families that the city manages to evolve in a transforming China. The new shift in focus to oneself and materialism has created many job opportunities in Xi 'an for both men and women. In this decade, Chinese women visit beauty parlors to improve their health and their appearance. With urban populations now having disposable income and companies such as M. Perfumine hiring young women from the countryside, luxuries such as beauty and cosmetics are becoming available to the middle class (p. 69-70). Teenage girls such as Jia Huan, who have only reached a junior high school education level, find few job opportunities in the city. Jia Huan 's mother believes “[the] beauty industry is good for Jia Huan. As a girl, what else is she going to do? She has no skills” (p. 83). These teenagers have a small chance at surviving in any other “career” where higher education and a wider skill-set are…
Almost everyone knows the story of the Gold Rush in the United States, and how it helped accelerate the settlement of the west. Arvada was formed during the Gold Rush era of the 1850s. As prospectors headed west to California, some stopped off in the Rocky Mountains and found pockets of gold there as well. Some mined the gold in the mountains while others farmed the bottom lands and provided crops for the other settlers. Arvada grew rapidly once the railroad was completed through the area, and it became a vibrant farming community. Today, Arvada offers a lot to residents and visitors alike as a suburb in the Denver area.…
The Colonial Australian society of the 1850’s was the beginning of a new start for many settlers and immigrants; when Gold was discovered in 1851. With the word “Gold” in Australia, ex-convicts, European settlers and Chinese immigrants came to seek riches on the gold fields. The hostilities grew between police officers, diggers. Frustration grew once more when in August 1851 a licence to dig gold was issued. The licence was made of paper and very fragile and was easy to wreck. Europeans became jealous of the progress of the Chinese and were annoyed with their language and decided to act. Ex-convicts becoming Police officers treating the diggers crudely. The “Eureka Stockade” was the digger’s rebellion against the gold licence and wrongfully accused.…
During the mid-19th century, the United States would see several major changes in the way it’s economic system worked, forever changing the way business and capitalism worked. These changes were just the beginning of something larger, which would later be kenned as the Californian Gold Rush. This Gold Rush would cause an influx of thousands of people endeavoring to get rich quick from the copious amounts of the precious metals in the ground. Although the conception of this idea being reality was tempting, many never made it big, causing a negative view of the Gold Rush to be born. Even due to this fact, the Gold Rush would refine and revise the U.S. economy into something it had never experienced before. How did the California Gold Rush Impact…
The origins of the 'White Australia' policy can be traced to the 1850s. White miners' resentment towards industrious Chinese diggers culminated in violence on the Buckland River in Victoria, and at Lambing Flat (now Young) in New South Wales. The governments of these two colonies introduced restrictions on Chinese immigration.…
The origins of the 'White Australia' policy can be traced to the 1850s. White miners' resentment towards industrious Chinese diggers culminated in violence on the Buckland River in Victoria, and at Lambing Flat (now Young) in New South Wales. The governments of these two colonies introduced restrictions on Chinese immigration.…
Dramatic Changes have taken place in Sydney 's cultural and economic landscapes during the past two decades. These changing landscapes have been linked in both political discourse and the popular press to Sydney 's emerging role as a global city '. Evidence supporting this theory has come from some academic analyses of globalisation in the 1990s. Global cities are identified by their role as command centers for organising the global economy. Such cities have been characterised by their openness to global flows of commodities, money, ideas and information. They have become destinations for both national and international migration of skilled information workers, but also magnets for new streams of global labor migration. The Asia-Pacific Rim has been one of the primary sources of these new flows of international migration into Sydney (Fagan, 2000, pg. 144). The aim of this essay is to gauge the impact of the said globalisations on the various landscapes of Sydney, as globalisation has effected different areas of Sydney in different ways. The principle areas discussed in this paper are Leichardt, Chinatown, Cabramatta, Darling Harbour, the CBD and Pyrmont. The impacts of cultural globalisations will be discussed first, followed by those of economic globalisations. Economic globalisation will be divided into 2 parts: primary impacts and subsequent impacts.…
It is difficult to believe that authentic “rags-to-riches” sagas built on honest hard work still happen in this modern and complex world. The son of poor immigrants from Fujian province, south China and himself born overseas, Andrew Tan grew up in downtown Manila dreaming of someday owning a store or small business like many of his peers’ families. As a child in Hong Kong, he and his family used to share a tenement apartment with four other families, with only one bathroom and one concrete table for all the tenant families’ cooking stoves. Tan recalls the apartment owner even leased out the corridor to another family.…
Although the first major wave of Chinese immigrants began with the 1858 gold rush, more than 15,000 Chinese labourers arrived from 1881 to 1885 for the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway. Prime Minister Sir John A. Macdonald acknowledged the necessity of Chinese labour, but as construction of the railway neared completion, he willingly yielded to prejudiced and discriminatory politicians, trade unionists and public…