Incoming Resources
- How does it feel to be unwanted?, stories of resistance and resilience from Mexicans living in the United States, Eileen Truax ; translated by Diane Stockwell
- Encountering Ellis Island, how European immigrants entered America, Ronald H. Bayor
- The best we could do, an illustrated memoir, Thi Bui
- Dreamers, an immigrant generation's fight for their American dream, Eileen Truax
- One quarter of the nation, immigration and the transformation of America, Nancy Foner
- Detained and deported, stories of immigrant families under fire, Margaret Regan
- Rallying for immigrant rights, the fight for inclusion in 21st century America, edited by Kim Voss and Irene Bloemraad
- Undocumented, how immigration became illegal, Aviva Chomsky
- Tell me how it ends, an essay in forty questions, Valeria Luiselli
- Integration nation, immigrants, refugees, and America at its best, Susan E. Eaton and the One Nation Indivisible Writers Group
- Doctors at the borders, immigration and the rise of public health, Michael C. LeMay
- A nation of nations, a great American immigration story, Tom Gjelten
- They seek a city, Chicago and the art of migration, 1910-1950, Sarah Kelly Oehler
- We too sing America, South Asian, Arab, Muslim, and Sikh immigrants shape our multiracial future, Deepa Iyer
- Storming the wall, climate change, migration, and homeland security, Todd Miller
- There goes the neighborhood, how communities overcome prejudice and meet the challenge of American immigration, Ali Noorani
- Terrorizing Latina/o immigrants, race, gender, and immigration politics in the age of security, Anna Sampaio
- The Edwin Fox, how an ordinary sailing ship connected the world in the age of globalization, 1850-1914, Boyd Cothran & Adrian Shubert
- White backlash, immigration, race, and American politics, Marisa Abrajano & Zoltan L. Hajnal
- I was their American dream, a graphic memoir, Malaka Gharib ; coloring by Toby Leigh
- Melting pot or civil war?, a son of immigrants makes the case against open borders, Reihan Salam
- Forgotten citizens, deportation, children, and the making of American exiles and orphans, Luis H. Zayas