Neglected Stories: People, History, Movements
Did Birthright Citizenship Start With the 14th Amendment? At a moment in 2026 when the U.S. Supreme Court is considering challenges to birthright citizenship, Neglected Stories: People, History, Movements welcomes historian Professor Van Gosse for a timely conversation that asks a provocative question: Did birthright citizenship really begin with the Fourteenth Amendment? Professor Gosse, Professor Emeritus at Franklin & Marshall College and co-chair of Historians for Peace and Democracy, argues that the principle of citizenship by birth has roots that reach far deeper into American history than many people realize. His research explores how debates over race, slavery, immigration, Indigenous sovereignty, and democracy have shaped the meaning of who belongs in America. Host Pedro Rodriguez and Professor Gosse discuss the historical origins of birthright citizenship and why the issue has returned to the center of national debate as the Supreme Court considers challenges stemming from efforts by the Trump Administration to deny automatic citizenship to some children born in the United States.
47 episodes
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