Historians launch Immigration Syllabus website

The 2016 presidential election and recent presidential actions have brought a great deal of attention to immigration and immigrants in American society, with much of the debate perpetuating harmful stereotypes, stoking fears about outsiders, and echoing a nativist rhetoric that many believed had disappeared from public discourse. In response, Maria Cristina Garcia, Howard A. Newman Professor of American Studies and Latina/o Studies, in collaboration with other distinguished immigration historians, has launched the #ImmigrationSyllabus website.

“The current immigration debate ignores century-long conversations about who is allowed into the country and what it means to be an American,” says Garcia. “Anti-immigrant rhetoric and immigrant surveillance, detention, and deportation have been a defining feature of American politics and state and federal policy since the 19th century.” 

 Many Americans have a romanticized idea of the nation’s immigrant past, Garcia says, including politicians, public commentators, critics, and journalists. “We hope our suggested readings, primary sources, and multimedia sources will help educators and citizens in their teaching and public discussions.  The syllabus might even help policymakers avoid the mistakes of the past," says Garcia.

This article also appeared in the Cornell Chronicle

 

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 Protesters holding banner saying "Immigration Syllabus"