Throughline
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Jasmine Romero
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The ongoing battle over asylum in America
American flag and barbed wire, USA border AlxeyPnferov/Getty Images hide caption
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AlxeyPnferov/Getty Images
The U.S. has long professed to be a country where people can seek refuge. That's the promise etched into the base of the Statue of Liberty. But it's never been that clear-cut. And in June, the Supreme Court passed two rulings that could make seeking safe haven in the U.S. even more difficult.
Today on the show, the story of how the U.S. asylum system was forged in response to moments of crisis, and where it left gaps: from Jewish refugees fleeing the Holocaust, to Cuban and Haitian asylum seekers during the Cold War, to the precarious system of today.
This episode originally aired in December 2024.
Guests:
Maria Cristina Garcia, Professor of History at Cornell University, studying immigrants, refugees, and asylum seekers
Ruth Wasem, former Immigration Policy Specialist at the U.S. Library of Congress' Congressional Research Service and author of the forthcoming book, The Struggle for Fairness: Forging the Immigration Act of 1965
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