NEIL V. HERNANDEZ is Assistant Professor of public and nonprofit management at the Baruch College Marxe School of Public and International Affairs of the City University of New York (CUNY). Prior to this appointment, he served as an asylum officer at U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. He earned his PhD in political science at the CUNY Graduate Center. neil.hernandez@baruch.cuny.edu
ROBIN DALE JACOBSON is Professor of Politics and Government at the University of Puget Sound. She has written extensively on the politics of immigration in the United States, including her book that explores the role of race in nativism, The New Nativism (University of Minnesota Press, 2008). rjacobson@pugetsound.edu
JEFFERY A. JENKINS is the Provost Professor of Public Policy, Political Science, and Law; the Maria B Crutcher Professor of Citizenship and Democratic Values; and the director of the Political Institutions and Political Economy Collaborative at the Price School of Public Policy, University of Southern California. His research focuses on American political institutions, American political development, and historical political economy. jajenkins@usc.edu
ROSINA LOZANO is an associate professor of history at Princeton University. She is the author of An American Language: The History of Spanish in the United States (University of California Press, 2018). rlozano@princeton.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9823-2875
NICHOLAS G. NAPOLIO is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science and International Relations at the University of Southern California. His research focuses on American political institutions, particularly executive and legislative politics. napolio@usc.edu https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8879-0726
DANIEL TICHENOR is the Philip H. Knight Chair of Social Science and Program Director of the Wayne Morse Center for Law and Politics at the University of Oregon. His most recent books are Rivalry and Reform (Chicago University Press, 2019) and Democracy’s Child (Oxford University Press, 2022). tichenor@uoregon.edu
AMY ZANONI is a historian of social welfare, health care politics, and social movements in the twentieth-century United States. Her book manuscript in progress is tentatively titled Poor Health: The Public Hospital in the Twentieth Century. The author may be contacted through her website. amyzanoni.com.