This paper examines the changing concept of pluralism in the United States, especially, in the aftermath of President Trump’s zeitgeist hard line immigration policy. Trump’s immigration agenda is forcefully manifested in ultra-nationalism tendencies including “trade war” (Economy, 2019), “economic populism” (Lenz and Gunter, 2017), “separation of young children from their parents at the border,” “claim of presidential powers to nullify the constitutional right to birthright citizenship” (Shapiro, 2019), “white identity politics” (Confessore, 2016), “racial resentment” (Harris, 2018), “racist nativist micro-aggressions” (Gomez and Huber, 2019), inciting racist and xenophobic rhetoric, such as “anti-Mexicanism and Islamophobia” (Huerta, 2017,...
This paper builds upon the arguments advanced by Johnson and Frombgen in “Race and the Emergence of ...
For the last decade, undocumented or illegal immigration has been one of the most contested policy i...
If the life sciences are to have much to say about politics, there needs to be a universal element t...
This paper arose from an invited symposium on Democracy in America: The Promise and the Perils, he...
While U.S. immigration entry policies after 1953 became a hallmark of ideological openness, designat...
This papers uses Trumpism to illustrate populism in power. It analyses it in its rhetorical style; i...
The year 2015 marked a colossal change in how the world views immigration. The migration crisis of E...
The author explores the implications and causes of the Trump campaign's theme of "America First" and...
Using law to conscript financial technology in aid of state goals is not new. Financial institutions...
Western Europe and the United States have both seen an increase in the number of elected officials w...
A strain of racist, xenophobic populism is sweeping through many democracies, jumping from the fring...
“Patriotism” should not be confused with “nationalism” as both concepts are used so vaguely that any...
Donald Trump ascended to the presidency largely on the promise to protect the American people—their ...
Since President Trump has taken office, it is clearer than ever that there are two ways to end “ille...
In reading this special issue we gain a remarkably insightful glimpse of the important role that imm...
This paper builds upon the arguments advanced by Johnson and Frombgen in “Race and the Emergence of ...
For the last decade, undocumented or illegal immigration has been one of the most contested policy i...
If the life sciences are to have much to say about politics, there needs to be a universal element t...
This paper arose from an invited symposium on Democracy in America: The Promise and the Perils, he...
While U.S. immigration entry policies after 1953 became a hallmark of ideological openness, designat...
This papers uses Trumpism to illustrate populism in power. It analyses it in its rhetorical style; i...
The year 2015 marked a colossal change in how the world views immigration. The migration crisis of E...
The author explores the implications and causes of the Trump campaign's theme of "America First" and...
Using law to conscript financial technology in aid of state goals is not new. Financial institutions...
Western Europe and the United States have both seen an increase in the number of elected officials w...
A strain of racist, xenophobic populism is sweeping through many democracies, jumping from the fring...
“Patriotism” should not be confused with “nationalism” as both concepts are used so vaguely that any...
Donald Trump ascended to the presidency largely on the promise to protect the American people—their ...
Since President Trump has taken office, it is clearer than ever that there are two ways to end “ille...
In reading this special issue we gain a remarkably insightful glimpse of the important role that imm...
This paper builds upon the arguments advanced by Johnson and Frombgen in “Race and the Emergence of ...
For the last decade, undocumented or illegal immigration has been one of the most contested policy i...
If the life sciences are to have much to say about politics, there needs to be a universal element t...