
New Books in Public Policy Sunmin Kim, "The Unruly Facts of Race: The Politics of Knowledge Production in the Early Twentieth-Century Immigration Debate" (U Chicago Press, 2026)
Mar 19, 2026
Sunmin Kim, associate professor of sociology and author of The Unruly Facts of Race, studies race, immigration, and the politics of knowledge. He recounts the Dillingham Commission's clash between racial theories and messy realities. Short takes cover how scientists like Franz Boas and Yamato Ichihashi complicated racial categories, how ethnicity reshaped classifications, and how commission findings fed quota politics and selective inclusion.
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Reality Forced Race Thinking To Become Flexible
- Early 20th-century officials shifted from rigid biological racial essentialism toward flexible cultural categories because real populations didn't fit textbook color schemas.
- Encounters in places like the Philippines revealed regional, religious, and historical distinctions that biology-alone couldn't explain.
Ethnicity Emerged As A Pragmatic Classification
- Robert Folkmar (Falkmar) reframed classification by invoking language, history, and religion, effectively introducing ethnicity as a pragmatic tool.
- He proposed a 1,000-year crystallization idea to distinguish groups like the Irish from newer Southern Europeans.
Boas Turned Racist Tools Against Racism
- Franz Boas used the same skull-measurement tools as racists to show environmental effects: immigrant children's skull shapes converged after years in the U.S.
- His findings undermined biological essentialism by demonstrating nurture-driven change within 5–10 years.



