
City College of New York historian Hidetaka Hirota鈥檚 seminal maiden book, 鈥,鈥 is winner of the Best First Book Award.
The national prize recognizes the work of early career scholars in the field of U.S. immigration and ethnic history. 鈥淓xpelling the Poor鈥 was judged to be the best book on any aspect of the immigration and ethnic history of the United States and/or North America. Other considerations were its substantial primary research, its presentation of a major new scholarly interpretation and, of course, it being Hirota鈥檚 first academic monograph.
Published by Oxford University Press, 鈥淓xpelling the Poor鈥 is the first sustained study of immigration control conducted by states prior to the introduction of federal immigration law in the late nineteenth century.
The 320-page work fundamentally revises the history of immigration restriction in the United States, especially deportation policy. Challenging the conventional understanding that the introduction of federal laws to restrict Chinese immigration in the late nineteenth century was the beginning of American immigration control, the book demonstrates how the states of New York and Massachusetts regulated immigration since the 18th century and locates the roots of American immigration control in anti-Irish nativism and economics on the Atlantic seaboard.
A substitute assistant professor in City College鈥檚 Division of Humanities and the Arts,
Hirota鈥檚 areas of research and teaching include: American immigration, 19th century U.S. history, the Civil War and Reconstruction eras, wealth and poverty in America, and transnational/international history.
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