Essay Topic Hub

Immigrants
Essays

2,041+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,041 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Immigration sits at the intersection of political science, public policy, sociology, and cultural studies, making it a frequent subject in government and social science courses. Students write about it because it raises fundamental questions about citizenship, economic belonging, national identity, and social integration. The topic spans legal and policy debates — such as arguments around legalization programs for undocumented workers — as well as lived cultural experiences, including language acquisition, family support services, and the spiritual and community lives immigrants build in new countries. Works like Junot Diaz's Drown and Abraham Cahan's Yekl also bring immigration into literary analysis, showing how the experience of displacement and assimilation translates across disciplines.

Archived papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are policy-focused, weighing the economic impact of legal and illegal immigrants on the United States or evaluating whether legalization programs serve national interests. Others are comparative, examining how immigrants influence economies in countries like Taiwan alongside the United States. Cultural and ethnographic angles appear frequently too, with papers exploring Latino spirituality, English language acquisition, bilingualism, and the challenges facing Korean American communities. Narrative and literary analysis essays examine immigrant identity through fiction and memoir, tracing themes of class and struggle across specific texts.

A strong essay on immigration scopes its thesis around a specific population, policy question, or cultural dynamic rather than treating immigrants as a single undifferentiated group. Evidence drawn from economic data, policy analysis, or close reading of primary sources carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is overgeneralizing — assuming one community's experience represents all immigrants, which undermines both analytical precision and the credibility of any argument.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Immigration and Customs Enforcement operations and policy
Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE is an agency of the Department of Homeland Security, which protects national security and promotes public safety (ICE 2008). It targets criminal networks and terrorist…
Paper Undergraduate
Mary Driscoll \"Dear America so
"Dear America So far from Home: The Diary of Mary Driscoll, an Irish Mill Girl" by Barry Denenberg. The author of this book, Barry Denenberg has written several books for middle-school and YA readers.
Paper Undergraduate
Immigration and its effects on economy and society
Immigration and the Effect on the Color Line in America Today
Paper Undergraduate
Crime in Chiccago Organized Crime
Starting with the middle of the twentieth century, the city of Chicago has been confronted with increasing criminality rates. The efforts of the police department have materialized in some control over the situations,…
Paper Undergraduate
Asian and Latino gangs: impact on communities and criminal justice
Gang violence today is a problem that no American community can fully escape. The crime associated with gang activity is so vast and differed that many within law enforcement find it very difficult to curb successfully.
Paper Undergraduate
Brazil\'s Old, or First, Republic
Brazil's old, or first, republic was born out of the erosion of support for the existing administration. A coup d'etat was carried out by conspirators with the support of the military and a Constituent Assembly…
Paper Undergraduate
America, Even the Native Americans,
¶ … America, even the Native Americans, were immigrants at one point, so immigration forms the backbone of this nation, and it is good for the country to be diverse.
Paper Undergraduate
MS-13: A Transnational Threat Movies
Movies like The Godfather have long memorialized and romanticized the concept of the mafia, despite the fact that this gang was one of the most dangerous and far-reaching in the United States.
Paper Undergraduate
Nature versus nurture: why the debate persists
In an attempt at understanding which between nature and nurture is responsible for the human mind and society, Steven Pinker (2002) responds to three "reasonable beliefs" offered by radical moderates.
Paper Undergraduate
Belonging, Web 2.0 and International
This work reports a study in which 24 international students were interviewed in a research initiative that seeks to understand how international students adjust to the host culture and specifically how use of the…