If you're in Baltimore and the DMV area, please join us on April 17 for a timely discussion about immigration history and law. A symposium commemorating the 150th anniversary of the Page Act: (schedule) history.jhu.edu/event/schoul...
02.04.2025 14:44 — 👍 5 🔁 0 💬 0 📌 0
Mass deportation is not inherently more practical, feasible, or realistic than open borders, but the collective imagination in this country can picture one much more easily than the other. There is a politics to what we see as im/possible.
02.12.2024 14:43 — 👍 86 🔁 21 💬 2 📌 3
Historian, writer, dog person.
PhD Candidate | UC Davis - Go Ags! | Political History | Latina/o/x Politics | California History
Quantitative Ecologist focused on salmon habitat at the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission | Former Assistant Professor studying Microbial Ecology / Evolutionary Biology / Bioinformatics | merdemicrobes.org | thecnidaegritty.org/iNatle/
Bridge to Faculty Postdoc @utsa, 🇺🇸 🇲🇽 borderlands scholar, oral & public historian, & digital humanist. Host & Producer of @ampidpod. Views my own.
Assistant Professor at the University of Prince Edward Island. Historian of China and the U.S., specializing in global historical and digital methods.
Social media profile for the journal American Nineteenth Century History: https://www.tandfonline.com/journals/fanc20
justinfjackson.com
Historian, author of The Work of Empire: War, Occupation, and the Making of American Colonialism in Cuba and the Philippines (UNC Press, 2025)
Author of "Securing Borders, Securing Power" (Columbia UP, 2022) http://tinyurl.com/yeywvdaa Doing migration politics/policy research, currently @colmigproject.bsky.social. Political speechwriter of yore. Obscure academic in provincial England, AZ guy 🌵
Latinx Historian, Professor of American Studies, co-editor of UNC Press' Latinx Histories book series
UNC Press’s Latinx Histories book series is premised on the view that understanding Latinx history is essential to a more complete and complex understanding of the history of the United States, the Americas, and the world.
history prof @williamandmary; THE MIGRANT'S JAIL: An American History of Mass Incarceration, out now from @PrincetonUPress
https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691237015/the-migrants-jail
Historian | Mobility Infrastructures | 19th-Century Worlds | Revolutions and Post-independences | Brazil
Native of Newry | Interloper Hoosier | Assistant Director of Research Programs, Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies, Notre Dame | Historian of U.S. immigration
We support the scholars and scholarship of early America, broadly understood to mean the Atlantic World between roughly the 1480s and 1820. We publish the William and Mary Quarterly and a series of award-winning books as well as sponsor conferences & more.
Assistant Professor of History | University of Cambridge | Historian of 20c U.S. religion, politics, and culture | Book w/ NYU Press | Sucker for books and coffee | Views are simply my own.
https://www.hist.cam.ac.uk/people/dr-nicholas-pruitt
History & Enviro Studies prof at Bowdoin College. Editor of Nature Unfurled: Asian American Environmental Histories @uwapress.bsky.social
Historian, writer. Professor of History, Swarthmore College. Most recent: MURDER IN A MILL TOWN (Oxford UP). Rep'd by Mullane Literary Associates.
Asst Prof Black Studies. Research on the carceral state, Black immigration, US history. Book under contract with UVA press on US/Haiti during the Cold War out 2026. Whoop whoop!
Assistant Prof @PrincetonAnthro @PrincetonSPIA
deportation/migration/violence/borders/police/asylum/honduras/mexico.
PhD in 20th Cen. U.S. History (Latinx, Labor, Immigration, Politics)
Book: Making Michigan Home: Mexican Americans Bridging the Rural-Urban Experience (Illinois Press Dec 2025) http://bit.ly/47BdTOH
Views my own / Reposts are not endorsements