John Flores

Associate Professor

Contact

john.flores@case.edu
216-368-2380
Mather House 211
http://johnfloresborderless.com

John H. Flores is an Immigration and Labor Historian.  He specializes in Mexican American history, and his research interests include the history of deportation and citizenship, transnational labor movements, and the formation of racial and national identities.

In The Mexican Revolution in Chicago, Flores created a census of the Spanish-speaking immigrants who applied for U.S. citizenship in Chicago between 1900 and 1940.  To date, this is the largest and most inclusive historical census of Hispanic naturalization in the United States.  Through this census, Flores traces the political activities of immigrants back to their origins in Mexico, Nicaragua, Cuba, and other countries, revealing the Latin American social movements that created the Mexican American community of Chicago.

Flores’ current book project assesses the relationship between American citizenship and violence with a focus on a series of lynchings that occurred along the U.S.-Mexico border on the eve of the Mexican Revolution.

Professor Flores teaches courses on Latina/os, immigration, labor, and race.

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