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Old and New Immigrants: On Nancy Foner's From Ellis Island to JFK
Introduction
LEO LUCASSEN
AFTER YEARS OF fierce discussion
concerning the extent to which the "new" post-1965 immigrants in the United
States are following the paths that earlier (mainly European) migrants
took a century earlier. Nancy Foner's From Ellis Island to JFK was soon
acknowledged as an important benchmark in this ongoing debate. Focusing
on New York as a case study, the author successfully integrated the insights
of both the historical and social sciences literature into a new challenging
paradigm. Without downplaying the important recent changes in both the
composition of the immigrant population and in the opportunity structure
of the receiving society, stressed by leading sociologists such as Alejandro
Portes and others, Foner's book also elaborately shows the structural
similarities in the long term integration patterns. Being an anthropologist,
she has edged her way through historical research. In this sense, Foner's
book is not only important in linking the two fields, but also in exemplifying
the future of the migration field: well-structured comparisons, treating
history as a social science specialized in the long-term developments,
as Charles Tilly, Ewa Morawska and others have advocated for so long.
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