Laura Alexander, Ph.D.

Associate Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Nebraska Omaha

Laura E. Alexander (she/her) is associate professor of religious studies and holds the Goldstein Family Community Chair in Human Rights at the University of Nebraska at Omaha. 

Alexander is a scholar of religious ethics, specializing in religion and human rights. She co-edited the volume The Meaning of My Neighbor’s Faith: Interreligious Reflections on Immigration (Fortress Academic, 2018) and has published articles on white Christian nationalism in the debates over Proposition 187 and the 2017 travel ban; Christian realist concepts of idolatry regarding immigration and the nation-state; comparative Christian and Muslim liberation theologies and human rights; and comparative Sikh and Christian ethics of hospitality toward refugees.

Alexander’s teaching covers topics in religion and human rights, ranging from immigration to war to public health, as well as world religions and global religious ethics. As Community Chair, she develops community partnerships and promotes education on human rights topics. She organizes Human Rights Week at UNO, a series of Human Rights Forums, an essay contest, and a scholarship for students working in unpaid internships in human rights areas.


This is Alexander’s second year as a PRRI Public Fellow. She has engaged in public scholarship for several years, including serving as a guest or invited expert for radio and television segments; publishing op-eds and articles of general interest, including in the Omaha World-Herald, The Conversation, and Political Theology; and highlighting aspects of PRRI’s survey research through immigration-focused Spotlight articles on the PRRI website.

Works By Laura Alexander, Ph.D.

Introduction In 2023, an important anniversary in immigration policy occurred: It has now been 10 years since the U.S. Senate passed S.744. Though S.744 never passed the House, this bill was notable for being an

In 2013, immigration policy was top of mind for many Americans due to President Obama’s push for immigration reform and the creation of the “Gang of Eight” senators who (unsuccessfully) strove to craft a bipartisan

The growth of Latino communities in the United States, both in number and in electoral importance, has led to much public discussion about “the Latino vote.” Political parties have tried to court Latinos, with varying

Media and certain narratives often pit racial groups against each other on the issue of immigration. One popular idea holds that Black Americans oppose immigration on the grounds that immigrants—most of whom have come from

The latest PRRI public opinion findings about immigration in the United States show a correlation between religious demographics and opinions about immigration. There are no clear correlations among reported opinions of members of the Christian

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