Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 240
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-1-4422-5136-6 • Hardback • September 2015 • $56.00 • (£43.00)
979-8-8818-0385-8 • Paperback • November 2024 • $25.00 • (£18.99)
978-1-4422-5137-3 • eBook • September 2015 • $23.50 • (£17.99)
Margaret "Peggy" Sands Orchowski PhD has covered immigration policy and law-making on the Hill as a fully credentialed Congressional journalist since 2005, as the Bill Analysis Editor for the Congressional Quarterly and as the Congressional Correspondent for the Hispanic Outlook magazine. She is author of Immigration and the American Dream: Battling the Political Hype and Hysteria and. The Law That Changed the Face of America: The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 (Rowman&Littlefield 2007 and 2015).
Peggy speaks and works easily in four languages having lived for over 10 years in South America and Europe. At the University of California (Berkeley and Santa Barbara) she was highly involved with foreign student and language immersion programs.
Foreword
Introduction: Why This Book?
Chapter One : Why Immigration Laws?
Chapter Two: From States to Feds: America’s Evolving Immigration Laws
Chapter Three: Making The Law That Changed the Face of America
Chapter Four: Impacts and Unintended Consequences
Chapter Five: Reforming the INA in the XXIst Century
Chapter Six: Lessons Learned
As we move into a lively election year, I wish that every candidate would be required to read Margaret “Peggy” Sands Orchowski’s book, The Law That Changed the Face of America: The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965.
— Noozhawk
Immigrants have shaped America, but few people understand how we got to where we are today. In this insightful book, Orchowski traces the history of U.S. immigration policy, tackling common myths and explaining the historical lessons for contemporary policy. If we don’t understand the past, she argues convincingly, we won’t be able to move into the future.
— Darrell M. West, vice president and director of Governance Studies, Douglas Dillon Chair, The Brookings Institution
In this book, Peggy Orchowski makes an important contribution by highlighting the history and consequences of the momentous 1965 immigration law, and what that history teaches us about the choices we have to make today.
— Mark Krikorian, executive director, Center for Immigration Studies
With brisk prose and nuanced perspective, Orchowski offers a savvy and informed glance back at how Senator Philip Hart and Congressman Emanuel Celler achieved bi-partisan cooperation in reforming immigration law. This historic legislative coup left a trail of intended and unintended consequences that echo still in contemporary partisan standoffs on immigration policy.
— Alan M. Kraut, University Professor of History, American University
In this important new book Orchowski examines paradoxes and myths of U.S. immigration policy by focusing on a 1965 immigration law whose unintended consequences ought to be central to every current debate on immigration reform.
— Magdalena Krajewska, assistant professor of political science, Wingate University