Recent Stories

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Illegal Immigration and the Border Crisis

Steven Malanga No, You’re Not Imagining a Migrant Crime Spree

Four years of open borders and sanctuary policies have brought criminal drug networks, human trafficking, and an epidemic of sexual assault.

Jeffrey H. Anderson Border Bait-and-Switch

The Biden administration is using misleading statistics and rhetoric to hide its role in perpetuating the migrant crisis.

Oct 17 2024
Christopher F. Rufo, Christina Buttons A Troubled Place

In Charleroi, Pennsylvania, the local population grapples with a surge of Haitian migrants.

Oct 07 2024
Christopher F. Rufo The Real Questions of the Immigration Debate

Recent migrant scandals force us to consider who, how, and how much.

Sep 24 2024
Fred Bauer Undermining America

The breakdown at the border has at once become a symbol of our polarization and an accelerant of it.

Sep 23 2024
Dave Seminara Wall? What Wall?

Kamala Harris hasn’t clarified her position on immigration and the border wall, and the media won’t press her to do so.

Sep 11 2024
Dan Katz, Daniel Di Martino No, Illegal Immigrants Aren't Lowering Inflation

Economists are wrong about migration and its effects.

Aug 30 2024
Steven Malanga The “Root” of Our Border Distress

Can we fix America’s immigration problems by reforming foreign governments? The Biden–Harris administration thought so.

Aug 20 2024
Nicole Gelinas The Migrant Contracting Mess

New York City sees tens of thousands of illegal aliens as a bonanza for no-bid deals.

Dave Seminara American Colleges as Visa Mills?

Donald Trump’s proposal to give green cards to all foreign students who graduate from a U.S. college is a bad idea.

Jul 03 2024
Dave Seminara Nothing to See Here

Mainstream media outlets refuse to cover illegal-immigrant crime.

May 22 2024
Jeffrey H. Anderson A Border Crisis By Design

It is unequivocally the intended result of Biden administration policy.

Feb 02 2024
Dave Seminara Biden’s Border Catastrophe

The president’s recent pledge to “shut down” the border suggests that, if nothing else could, his political survival might finally motivate him to enforce the law.

Jan 29 2024
Dave Seminara Border Bollocks

The Biden administration misleads the public about its new parole system.

Nov 06 2023
Steven Malanga Illegal Immigration’s Terrifying Cost

State and local governments are spending billions on migrants and asylum seekers—and the bill will only grow steeper.

Dave Seminara Biden Builds a Wall

The president’s move to construct 20 miles of barrier fence on the Mexican border is too little, too late, but still a symbolic victory for sanity.

Oct 11 2023

From City Journal’s Symposium Series

Which Way the University?

A symposium on higher education in the United States

Fighting the Oldest Hate

A symposium on anti-Semitism in the United States

Symposium: An Economic Agenda for the Next President

Proposals to reinvigorate American dynamism, innovation, and self-sufficiency

Symposium: A New Anticrime Agenda

Proposals for reversing America’s criminal-justice decline

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Podcasts

City Journal’s 10 Blocks podcast features rich conversations on public policy and culture with host Brian C. Anderson.

In the Risk Talking podcast, host Allison Schrager—economist, journalist, and author—discusses cutting-edge economics in plain language.

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The Spotlight

Harvey Mansfield Our Parties, Part One

The Democrats: how progress became drift

Harvey Mansfield Our Parties, Part Two

The Republicans: party of virtue

Chris R. Morgan The Devil You Don’t Know

A new book analyzes the hellfire and hucksterism behind William Friedkin’s horror classic, The Exorcist.

Oct 27 2023
Carlos Acevedo “The Fearful Colored into the Horrible”

Edgar Allan Poe and The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket

Oct 28 2022
Joshua Mitchell The Identity-Politics Death Grip

Democrats’ abandonment of their traditional blue-collar constituency is bad for their party—and for the country.

Kay S. Hymowitz Alone

The decline of the family has unleashed an epidemic of loneliness.

Anne Hendershott Taking the Catholic Out of Catholic Universities

Rather than embrace the good, the true, and the beautiful, many of the schools have adopted the politically correct fads of secular universities.

Darran Anderson Seer of the Selfie

Christopher Lasch’s cultural criticism anticipated our narcissistic age.

Nicole Gelinas Storm Surge

The federal government is spending too much on post-disaster rebuilding and too little on prevention.

Christopher F. Rufo Will It Be Riot Season Again in 2024?

Conservatives must learn the lessons of 2020—and prepare.

Dec 04 2023
John Tierney Lockdowns: the Self-Inflicted Disaster

Governments’ use of the pandemic to claim sweeping new emergency powers has had destructive effects.

Jul 06 2023
Michael J. Totten A Tidal Wave of Death

The 1918 Spanish flu was a killer of historic proportions.

Daniel J. Flynn Hustle of the Hit King

A new biography of Pete Rose is as addictive to read as it once was to watch him play.

Mar 29 2024
Roger Kimball Crazy Like a Visionary

Elon Musk’s remarkable career reminds us that individuals matter.

Aug 23 2015
Stephen Eide Tribune of the Middle-Class City

The late historian Fred Siegel saw families and economic opportunity as essential to urban life.

Theodore Dalrymple Why We Love Falstaff

There is some of Shakespeare’s incorrigible rogue in all of us.

Jonathan Clarke Your New York, and Mine

The ambivalence of life in a great city

Mar 15 2024
Daniel DiSalvo The Unsolvable City

Revisiting the still-controversial work of urbanist Edward Banfield can help put race relations, education, housing, crime, and other policy debates into a broader perspective.

Nov 03 2023
Brian Patrick Eha The End of Men’s Magazines

As increasing numbers of American males seem adrift, they can no longer look to venerable publications for guidance.

Laura Vanderkam Journey Through the Checkout Racks

Comparing women’s magazines, then and now, shows how much America has changed.