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The Whites-Only Immigration Regime, 1803 to Now

Department of History 2025 O. Meredith Wilson Lecture


 

The Department of History is excited to host Professor Kelly Lytle Hernandez for the 2025 O. Meredith Wilson Lecture on Thursday, September 25, 2025.
2pm catered reception | G. W. Anderson Family Great Hall at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts
3pm lecture | Katherine W. & Ezekiel R. Dumke Jr. Auditorium at the Utah Museum of Fine Arts.

Event is free and open to the public.


Kelly Lytle Hernandez

Dr. Kelly Lytle Hernandez
Thomas E. Lifka Endowed Chair
of History at UCLA

During the Haitian Revolution (1791-1804), Congress passed the nation’s first immigration ban, targeting free Black migrants, namely Haitians, for exclusion. After the Civil War, federal authorities wildly expanded the nation’s immigration system to target Black, Asian, and other nonwhite immigrants for exclusion, punishment, and removal, creating the framework for our modern immigration system. By the 1930s, Congress had adopted a Whites-only immigration regime in all but name. That regime effectively hung a “Whites only” sign on the nation’s front door while propping the nation’s “backdoor” open to a racialized, criminalized, and deportable workforce. To date, federal authorities have revised but never repealed this system. This talk chronicles the rise, evolution, and persistence of the whites-only immigration regime, from 1803 to now.

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Professor Kelly Lytle Hernández holds The Thomas E. Lifka Endowed Chair in History at UCLA. One of the nation’s leading experts on race, immigration, and mass incarceration, she is the author of the award-winning books Migra! A History of the U.S. Border Patrol(University of California Press, 2010), City of Inmates: Conquest, Rebellion, and the Rise of Human Caging in Los Angeles(University of North Carolina Press, 2017), and Bad Mexicans: Race, Empire, and Revolution in the Borderlands (Norton, 2022). She is also the founding director and principal advisor for the Million Dollar Hoods research initiative, which documents the fiscal and human cost of mass incarceration in Los Angeles. For her historical and contemporary work, Professor Lytle Hernández was named a 2019 MacArthur “Genius” Fellow. She is also an elected member of the Society of American Historians, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Pulitzer Prize Board.

 

Last Updated: 9/2/25