Recent Years
Jamaicans have been emigrating to countries

Jamaicans have been emigrating to countries like Australia, New Zealand, Mexico, Japan, Malaysia, and Indonesia.

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Man with Orange pants and a brown bag walking
Late 20th & 
early 21st century
Close to a million Jamaicans emigrated

Close to a million Jamaicans emigrated, mainly to the United States, the United Kingdom, and Canada.

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Visa application form with passport and flags of different countries
1960s
Jamaican-U.S. migration increased dramatically, primarily of skilled Jamaican nurses

Jamaican-U.S. migration increased dramatically, primarily of skilled Jamaican nurses. This was influenced by high U.S. labor demand for nurses and medical workers, a shift in emigrant destinations after restrictions from Great Britain's Commonwealth Immigrants Act 1962, and the U.S. Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 favoring higher skilled Jamaicans and other West Indians.

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Black female doctor and nurse with arms folded and smiling
Late 1950s
Job opportunities in Britain

Job opportunities in Britain began with post-war reconstruction and continued with unemployment challenges.

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Jamaican people standing on staircase
1950s
Jamaicans started migrating to the UK due to labor shortages after World War 2

Jamaicans started migrating to the UK due to labor shortages after World War 2. This migration is known as the Windrush Generation, named after the first ship, Empire Windrush, that carried passengers from Jamaica to the UK.

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Jamaicans on the Empire Windrush London ship
1880s and 1910s
Jamaicans supplied labor

Jamaicans supplied labor, especially during the Panama Canal's construction.

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Jamaicans providing labour on the Panama Canal