Metadata
Title
Maria Cristina Garcia
Category
general
UUID
870d03f0978d46d2898020aa917d04d9
Source URL
https://americanstudies.cornell.edu/maria-cristina-garcia
Parent URL
https://americanstudies.cornell.edu/faculty-books
Crawl Time
2026-03-09T07:14:40+00:00
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Maria Cristina Garcia

Source: https://americanstudies.cornell.edu/maria-cristina-garcia Parent: https://americanstudies.cornell.edu/faculty-books

Howard A. Newman Professor of American Studies and Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow

Overview

Garcia, an Andrew Carnegie Fellow, writes and teaches about refugees, immigrants, and asylum seekers.  Her most recent book is State of Disaster: The Failure of U.S. Migration Policy in an Age of Climate Change (University of North Carolina Press, 2022), which was awarded an Honorable Mention from the Theodore Saloutos Book Prize committee of the Immigration and Ethnic History Society.

She is the author of three other books:  The Refugee Challenge in Post-Cold War America (Oxford University Press, 2017), a study of the actors and interests that have shaped US refugee policy in the Post-Cold War and post 9/11 era; Seeking Refuge: Central American Migration to Mexico, the United States, and Canada(University of California Press, 2006), a study of the individuals, groups, and organizations that responded to the Central American refugee crisis of the 1980s and 1990s, and helped shape refugee policies throughout North America; and Havana USA: Cuban Exiles and Cuban Americans in South Florida (University of California Press, 1996), examined the migration of Cubans to the United States after the Castro revolution and how these Cold war migrants-became a powerful economic and political presence in the United States, influencing foreign policy and electoral outcomes, reshaping the cultural landscape of the South, and ultimately reinterpreting what it means to assimilate.

Garcia is co-editor (with Maddalena Marinari) of Whose America? U.S. Immigration Policy since 1980 (University of Illinois Press, 2023); and  (with Maddalena Marinari and Madeline Hsu) of A Nation of Immigrants Reconsidered: U.S. Society in an Age of Restriction, 1924-1965 (University of Illinois Press, 2019).

Her undergraduate and graduate courses reflect these research interests and are cross-listed with (or fulfill the requirements of) American Studies, Latino Studies, Latin American Studies, and Migration Studies.  While Garcia considers herself primarily a historian of 20th century U.S. history, her interest in displaced and mobile populations has increasingly blurred the geographic borders of her work.

In addition to the Andrew Carnegie Fellowship, Garcia is an elected member of the Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Society of American Historians. She is one of the two inaugural recipients of the President's and Provost's Award for Excellence in Research, Teaching,and Service in Diversity. She is also the recipient of Kendall S. Carpenter Memorial Advising Award and the Stephen and Margery Russell Distinguished Teaching Award.

Garcia serves on the History Advisory Committee of the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation and has served as a consultant on various television programs.

Her op-eds have appeared in the Washington Post, the Wall Street Journal, The Conversation, the Orlando Sun-Sentinel, and Quartz. She has been interviewed on National Public Radio, C-Span, and Bloomberg Radio.

Research Focus

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Responsibilities

Director, Latino Studies Program

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