The Passport in America: The History of a Document

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Authors: Craig Robertson
Tags: Law, Legal History, Emigration & Immigration
Acknowledgments
    Numerous people have helped me along the way with the thinking and writing that has become this book. Its early life took place at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. While I have little fondness for those towns I have a great deal of affection for the people I met when I lived there as a graduate student, many of whom continue to challenge me intellectually. I am privileged to be able to thank Cameron McCarthy, John Nerone, James Hay, Antoinette Burton, and Toby Miller for their enthusiasm for the project and for giving me the intellectual freedom to initially pursue it. The arguments and ideas in this book simply could not have come to exist without another group of five people—Ted Bailey, Jack Bratich, Mary Coffey, Sammi King, and Jeremy Packer—who while technically fellow graduate students also took on the role of teachers and mentors to me, especially when I returned to graduate school after a two-year break.
    During my time in Urbana-Champaign and subsequently in Boston the support of other friends and colleagues has been invaluable: Tony Ballantyne, Marcus Breen, Kevin Bruyneel, Alexis Burson, Murray Forman, Kelly Gates, Jullily Kohler-Hausmann, Marie Leger, Marina Levina, David Marshall, Dan McGee, Mark Nimkoff, Mary O’Donaghue, Joanne Morreale, Victor Pickard, Vincent Rocchio, Ben Scott, Simone Sidwell, Rob Sloane, Gretchen Soderlund, Beth Starr, Alan Zaremba, and especially Rachel Dubrofsky. I am also fortunate to have as current department colleagues two people who also somehow managed to make it from the University of Illinois to Northeastern University; David Monje and Kumi Silva continue to give me the support and understanding that only close friends can.
    At different stages of the writing of what became this book some colleagues and friends provided particular assistance that I am very happy to acknowledge. At the very beginning Tony Ballantyne, Charis Thompson, and especially Lacey Torge helped me to figure out what history of the passport I wanted to write. Kelly Gates, Marie Leger, and Rob Sloane read the first hesitant attempts at putting thoughts on paper in that ugliest of genres, the draft dissertation chapter. Mark Andrejevic, Rachel Hall, Josh Lauer, and Chris Russill, through conversation and their own writings, sharpened my ideas as dissertation became book manuscript. I am grateful to Laura Fraderand Carla Kaplan for their insightful suggestions on how to translate my arguments into an effective book proposal.
    Research assistance in the form of financial support came from the Institute of Communications Research and the Graduate College of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the Babson College Board of Research, and the Office of the Provost, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the Department of Communication Studies at Northeastern University. I received fantastic support from the Interlibrary Loan departments at Babson College, Northeastern University, and especially the University of Illinois. Other critical research support came in the form of the generous hospitality of Rob and Robin Wilder, who let me stay for many months in their house while I researched at National Archives in Washington, D.C., and Maryland. Ben Scott and Jenny Wustenberg also provided hospitality and accommodation during a brief mopping up visit to National Archives. Elizabeth Pryor was generous enough to give me access to her dissertation. The friendly staff at Caffe Paradiso in Urbana, Victrola on Capitol Hill in Seattle, and especially 1369 Coffee House in Inman Square in Cambridge indirectly provided writing support by letting a non–coffee drinker sit and write for long hours—I should add I have cultivated a tea-drinking habit, and I like to think I tip well.
    I am very grateful to Susan Ferber at Oxford University Press for initially seeing the value of an interdisciplinary history of the passport in the United States. Most importantly, I appreciate her understanding

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