
main content Elliott Young
Professor of History
Spring 2025: Tuesday 11:30-1, Wednesday 1-2:30
Specialty
Latin AmericaAcademic Credentials
Ph. D., M.A University of Texas, Austin, BA Princeton University
Teaching
Spring 2025
HIST 142-01: Modern Latin American History
HIST 308-01: Public History Lab
HIST 300-01: Historical Materials
Research
My research and teaching focuses on transnational migration and borderlands history. I regularly teach classes on colonial and modern Latin American history, as well as country-specific classes on Mexico and Cuba. I also teach Immigration & Asylum Law and Public History Lab, two classes that focus on the causes of migration from Latin America, including Mexico, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Venezuela, and Cuba, and address topics such as politics, gangs and cartels, gender-based and domestic violence, and harms to the LGBT community.
My most recent book, Forever Prisoners: How the United States Made the World’s Largest Immigrant Detention System (Oxford, 2021), explores the long-history of immigrant incarceration in the United States, showing the various means by which migrants have been locked up and the ways in which racism has undergirded immigration policies since their origin. My second book, Alien Nation: Chinese Migration in the Americas from the Coolie Era through WWII (UNC, 2014) focused on the cross-border movement of Chinese in the Americas, revealing the similar ways in which Chinese were stigmatized across the continent and how Chinese migrants evaded restrictions. My first book, Catarino Garza’s Revolution on the Texas-Mexico Border (Duke 2004), centered on the story of a South-Texas-Mexican journalist and revolutionary who fought against Mexico’s president Porfirio Díaz in the late nineteenth century. I also co-edited with Sam Truett, Continental Crossroads: Remapping US-Mexico Borderlands History (Duke, 2004), a volume on new directions in borderlands history.
I am the co-founder of the Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas, a seminar that has brought together scholars from Latin and North America for more than twenty years. I also founded and direct the Migration Scholar Collaborative (MiSC), a national network of migration scholars and am co-director of the Migration and Asylum Lab (MAL) at Stanford University, with an affiliate at Lewis & Clark College. I have provided expert witness testimony for over 700 asylum cases. In addition to my scholarship, my opinion essays have appeared in a variety of different outlets, including the Washington Post, Time, the Houston Chronicle, and the Oregonian.
Professional Experience
Academic Positions
- Professor of History, Lewis & Clark College, May 2014 - present
- Associate Professor of History, Lewis & Clark College, September 2003 – May 2014
- Assistant Professor of History, Lewis & Clark College, August 1997- August 2003
- Chair of History department, Lewis & Clark College, July 2009 - July 2011, July 2012- July 2014
- Director, Latin American Studies Minor, Lewis & Clark College, Aug. 1998- July 2007, Jan.-July 2009
- Director, Ethnic Studies Minor, Lewis & Clark College, August 2006- July 2011
- Co-Founder /Treasurer Tepoztlán Institute for Transnational History of the Americas, 2003- present
Public Writing and Media Commentary
Recent opinion essays include:
“What the Mexican President Could Learn from the 19th c. Mexican Journalist He Idolizes,” Time, April 9, 2024.
“Locking up the mentally ill has a long history,” Washington Post, Jan. 3, 2023.
“Like the 19th-century U.S., Putin seized separatist claims to expand his empire,” Washington Post, Mar. 4, 2022.
Location: Miller Hall
History is located in Miller Center on the Undergraduate Campus.
MSC: 41
email history@lclark.edu
voice 503-768-7405
fax 503-768-7418
Chair Reiko Hillyer
Administrative Coordinator Amy Baskin
History
Lewis & Clark
615 S. Palatine Hill Road
Portland OR 97219