This unvarnished collection of articles traces evolving
issues and provides a unique history of the long-running national immigration
dilemma.
American immigration has been debated in the pages of
The Nation almost since its founding in 1865. The magazine has generally
come down on the inclusive or “liberal” side of the great debate, but the
editors were not immune from the prejudices of their times—an 1891 editorial
called for the exclusion of “lunatics, paupers and cripples.”
In our own time, the post-9/11 anti-terrorism mania
prompted a crackdown on those with Muslim ties, however innocent.
Editor Richard Lingeman’s sentiment: “We hope this perspective will
inform and inspire readers to support the reforms appropriate for America in
the twenty-first century.”