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  1. Japanese-Americans were outraged at what they believed to be a breach of the treaty of 1894 that had guaranteed them the right to immigrate. As the problem escelated the Japanese and the United States governments intervened to preserve diplomatic peace.The Gentleman's Agreement of 1907 collection in DIVA gathers primary source documents ...

  2. The 1907 Gentlemen's Agreement – promoted by President Theodore Roosevelt – was a US immigration policy that established restrictions on Japanese labour. The policy came at a time of growing tension over Asian immigration to the west coast of the USA as well as to Canada and Mexico.

  3. 29 de oct. de 2009 · The Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907-08 was an informal arrangement between the United States and Japan to ease growing tensions between the two countries, particularly pertaining to immigration. It ...

  4. 1907. Rather than enacting racially discriminatory and offensive immigration laws, President Theodore Roosevelt sought to avoid offending the rising world power of Japan through this negotiated agreement by which the Japanese government limited the immigration of its own citizens.

  5. ocultar. El Acuerdo de caballeros de 1907 (en inglés: Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907; y en japonés: 日米紳士協約, [Nichibei Shinshi Kyōyaku]) fue un acuerdo informal entre Estados Unidos y el Imperio del Japón por el cual Estados Unidos dejaba de imponer restricciones a la inmigración japonesa, y Japón restringía la ...

  6. Gentlemen's Agreement of 1907; Type: Informal agreement: Context: To reduce tensions between the two powerful Pacific nations: Signed: February 15, 1907 () Effective: 1907: Expiry: 1924: Parties Japan United States

  7. The Gentlemen's Agreement was a series of informal and nonbinding arrangements between Japan and the United States in 19078, in which the Japanese government agreed to voluntarily restrict issuing passports good for the continental United States to laborers while the US government promised to protect the rights of Japanese immigrants and ...