Immigration is not simply about compassion or control.
It is about capacity.
Across Europe, North America, and beyond, nations are confronting a defining question of the twenty-first century: how much change can a political community absorb-at what pace-without destabilizing its institutions, economy, and social cohesion?
In The Threshold, investigative journalist Mark Ellison examines immigration not as a slogan, but as a structural policy variable. Drawing on real-world case studies-from the United States in the early twentieth century to Canada's points-based system, from Australia's territorial enforcement model to Germany's 2015 refugee crisis, from France's urban peripheries to Sweden's accelerated demographic shift-Ellison identifies a recurring pattern:
Success and failure are rarely about morality alone.
They are about alignment between volume, speed, and institutional capacity.
This book does not argue for isolation. Nor does it defend unlimited expansion. Instead, it asks the uncomfortable operational questions often avoided in public debate:
What is a nation's absorptive capacity?
How does pace affect integration?
When does policy shift from planning to reaction?
Can immigration remain sustainable without democratic consent?
Ellison also confronts the political dimension-how regularizations, citizenship policy, and demographic change intersect with electoral incentives in modern democracies.
Clear, analytical, and grounded in comparative evidence, The Threshold challenges both ideological extremes. It offers a framework for thinking about immigration as a long-term structural decision rather than a short-term emotional reaction.
In an era of polarization, this book argues for something more demanding than outrage or sentiment:
Measurement. Planning. Responsibility.
Because regulation is not closure.
It is choice.