Short Studies
1. The economic effects of immigration. E. A. Ross, The Old World in the New, pp. 195-227.
2. The immigrant in American politics. M. K. Simkhovitch, The City Worker’s World, pp. 181-209; P. F. Hall, Immigration, pp. 183-198; R. A. Woods, Americans in Process, pp. 147-189.
3. The German immigrant. A. B. Faust, The German Element in the United States, pp. 357-390.
4. The Italian immigrant. R. F. Foerster, The Italian Immigration of Our Times, pp. 374-411.
5. The Slavic immigrant. E. G. Balch, Our Slavic Fellow Citizens, pp. 349-377.
6. Our treatment of the immigrant. Jacob A. Riis, The Making of an American, pp. 58-100; E. A. Steiner, From Alien to Citizen, pp. 53-71; 122-168.
7. Immigrant life in the large cities. R. A. Woods, The City Wilderness, pp. 33-57; Ibid., Americans in Process, pp. 104-146.
8. The economic problems of the negro. Booker T. Washington, The Future of the Negro, pp. 42-66; Carl Kelsey, The Negro Farmer, pp. 22-28, and passim.
9. The problem of the Japanese on the Pacific coast. L. H. Gulick, The American-Japanese Problem, pp. 3-27; H. A. Millis, The Japanese Problem in the United States, pp. 152-196.