Immigrants as Assets for Midwestern Communities Cornelia Butler Flora Marta Maldonado June 1, 2006

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Immigrants as Assets for Midwestern Communities Cornelia Butler Flora Marta Maldonado June 1, 2006"

Transcription

1 Immigrants as Assets for Midwestern Communities Cornelia Butler Flora Marta Maldonado June 1, 2006 In a study about community responses to migration in Marshalltown, Iowa (Flora, et al., 2000), we found two oppositional camps responding to new immigrants: the Legalists and the Pluralists. Legalists were outraged that people were in the country without documentation. They also were upset with the employers that recruited and hired these workers. They drew on the legal tradition of the U.S. to back their arguments. They attributed the rise in the use of methamphetamines to the increase in unauthorized Hispanics in the Midwest, ignoring the homegrown meth labs using local ingredients. They viewed unauthorized immigrants as the source of crime in their small town. This is contrary to studies showing that immigrants do not commit crimes at higher rates than native-born Americans (Hagan and Palloni, 1999). Pluralists stressed the need for a diverse and dynamic society. Drawing on the history of the United States as a nation of immigrants, they stressed the importance of the immigrants to the fabric of the community, citing their importance as workers, consumers, and entrepreneurs. Similarly, Grey and Woodrick have found through a host of studies that what they call the rule is consistently operative in rural communities in Iowa: About 20 percent of local residents actively welcome immigrant newcomers and are open to making things work. About 20 percent intransigently opposes immigrant influx. The remaining 60 percent is ambivalent about newcomers and fearful of change. Grey and Woodrick s work also replicates the Flora et al. finding that the division between those who embrace new immigrants and those who don t corresponds to a division between those who see immigrant influx as an increase in lawlessness, and those who see it as needed or inevitable diversification and change. For example, a more recent study in Marshalltown shows that while many Anglo residents have received immigrants enthusiastically, perceiving that their arrival has contributed to the long term social and economic well-being of the community, others vehemently object to undocumented ( illegal ) immigration, and associate immigrants with perceived increases in crime, and with a corporate scheme to weaken unions and lower wages (Grey and Woodrick, 2005). Likewise, extension and non-for profit groups working with communities for economic development in Iowa have recently found meetings transformed from, for example, a discussion of how to improve the next Farm Bill, to attributing all personal and community problems to illegal immigrants. The tension between legalists and pluralists is also evident at the level of public agencies and community institutions. For example, while in many communities in the Midwest the relationship between law enforcement authorities and new immigrants is tense and reveals mutual distrust (see for example, Dalla and Christensen, 2005), in some states (e.g., Missouri) police departments have launched immersion programs through which officers are sent to immigrant-sending communities to gain awareness of immigrants native language(s), and to acquire cultural competencies that improve 1

2 interaction with immigrant communities while enhancing community relations and the safety of all. Beyond community perceptions of and feelings regarding the legality or illegality of immigrants, and beyond whether or not individuals hold stereotypical beliefs about immigrants alleged propensity toward crime, community responses to immigration involve the collective grappling with fundamental questions of cultural identity and community cohesion. For example, language has been shown to be a recurrent point of contention between settled residents and newly arrived immigrants (see for example, Naples, 2000). The fact that most new immigrants are not English speakers is seen by some settled residents as a barrier to neighborly interaction, which is an essential element of community. How can they engage with newcomers, if they can t even speak with them at the grocery store? Similarly, as a marker of culture, language is an immediately apparent boundary between settled residents and immigrant newcomers as members of separate cultural and national communities. Indeed, the demarcation of cultural and national boundaries through language has been a defining element in U.S. nativism since the mid 1960s, when Latin America and Asia became the leading sources of immigrants to the United States. The recent Senate vote to make English the official language of the United States (which not accidentally, arose out of the debate about immigration reform) is the most recent manifestation of this historical practice. The linguistic diversity that comes with immigration complicates homogeneous notions of community, challenging us to imagine new ways of building community (nationally and locally) that both incorporate and transcend cultural difference. To a large extent, the rapidly increasing influx of immigrants into the United States is attributable to increasing socioeconomic integration between this country and immigrantsending countries in Latin America (most notably Mexico) and Asia (Krissman, 2005; 2000). U.S. employers often with the support and assistance of federal, state, and local governments have been key agents fostering such immigration (Krissman, 2000, Waldinger, 2003; Rodríguez, 2004; Maldonado, 2004). In many non-metropolitan communities, the rapid increase in diversity from recent years is the logical result of rural development models based on the creation of low wage jobs, often instigated by local and state authorities as industrial recruitment and job creation. Individuals and families from other countries and of different racial and ethnic backgrounds fill the jobs, which are too low paying or too dirty or too strenuous for local residents, who may themselves leave the community to seek better opportunities elsewhere. Non-metropolitan communities across the country must deal with the contradictions of superimposing a policy of job creation over a situation of a labor shortage. How the issues are framed, how problems are defined, and how desired futures are expressed help communities respond to the challenges of increased diversity. This collective framing by groups also helps define spaces where reconciliation and positive change can be achieved. These stories and their retelling are part of the struggle for community -- who defines identity and what concrete actions are collectively implemented. As discussed above, recognizing the differences within the receiving Anglo community is as important as recognizing the differences between the in-migrant community and the 2

3 receiving one. The ubiquitous tension between legalists and pluralists shapes the context of reception and the mixed experience of many immigrants in U.S. communities. This is eloquently captured in a comment made by a Latina immigrant who was interviewed in Taking Roots, a recent documentary from the American Friends Service Committee. Asked about how she feels about living in Perry, Iowa, she said that Perry is a place that is both calm and tense, where she feels free, but not comfortable ( me siento libre, pero no cómoda ).Furthermore, the battle for community identity represented by the different factions makes a great deal of difference on the way in which the migrant community can safely organize in its own interests. In the center of the U.S., those who defined themselves as native to the U.S.A. have almost at the same time welcomed immigrants and blamed them for social, environmental and economic problems. At a period when little seems controllable and U.S. citizenship is less valued in other countries and our rights seem to be somewhat eroded by the necessities of Homeland Security, we follow our historic pattern when we blame the immigrants, particularly those who do not hold complete documentation of their legal status. As the nation debates immigration policy, it is helpful to consider the role of immigrants, particularly those from Latin America, in our North Central communities. Demographer Jeffrey Passel, using data form the March 2005 Current Population Survey and other data sources estimates they are now 11.5 to 12 million unauthorized persons in the U.S. as of March 2006 (March, 2006). Many unauthorized workers are recruited by labor contractors or friends already employed. Passel (2006) estimated unauthorized migrants make up nearly 5 percent of the labor force. Their vulnerability due to lack of documentation (which is often in process) reinforces their willingness to work hard at dirty jobs for low pay (Massey, Durand, and Malone, 2002). The federal government has a work visa -- known as H-2B -- that aims to help unskilled migrants enter the country legally. But the government issues only about 66,000 new H-2B visas each year. The guest workers are allowed to stay for 10 months. Less than 1% of employment-based visas are issued to low skilled workers; the odds of a low-wage worker obtaining a visa to enter the US to work are close to zero under current immigration laws. A recent review of major surveys of American public opinion on immigration shows that a significant majority of Americans sees unauthorized immigration as a serious or very serious problem (Pew Hispanic Center, May 17, 2006). A concern about unauthorized immigrants among a significant number of Americans (though not among the majority, according to the recent review by Pew) is that it is assumed they take jobs away from native- born workers and decrease wages. While the subject of the impact of immigrants on U.S. labor markets is a contentious one, most of the evidence suggests that immigrant workers complement rather than compete with the domestic labor force. A recent study by economist Giovanni Peri (March 2006) found in cities with more immigrants, the wages of US-born workers were higher by 1.1% during the 1990s than in cities with fewer immigrants. That is because foreign-born workers occupied jobs at the lowest and highest educational levels, where there are fewer U.S. workers. As U.S. workers increase their occupational level, they abandon low-paying, low skilled jobs for jobs that provide a 3

4 greater reward both monetarily and psychically. However, for native-born workers without a high school diploma (a shrinking proportion of the native-born labor force), wages declined by about 1.2 percent. The study demonstrated that foreign-born workers do not substitute perfectly for, and therefore, do not compete with, most native-born workers. Further, this study shows how the presence of new workers stimulates the creation of new businesses. Passel (2006) finds that unauthorized workers are 24% of all workers employed in farming, 17% in cleaning, 14% in construction, and 12% in food preparation. About 30% of foreign born-workers are unauthorized, accounting for about 4.9% of the civilian labor force. Thirty-one percent of unauthorized workers are employed in service occupations, compared to 16% of native workers. Unauthorized workers were 26% of all insulation workers, 29% of all roofers and drywall installers, and 27% of all butchers and other food processing workers. Meatpacking companies generally begin recruiting their labor force in Latino communities (Stull, 1990; Broadway, 1990; Naples, 2000; Johnson-Webb, 2002). In Iowa, despite its long meatpacking history, the reformulated and de-unionized plants sent recruiters to California and Texas. Once the migrant networks were established, formal recruiting activities gave way to the use of informal networks for replenishing the work force (Griffin and Kissam, 1995; Gouveia and Stull, 1995). The first new plant workers were single males, as is the pattern in many places, with the meat packing jobs providing a rite of passage and the opportunity to send money home to Mexico (Hondagneu-Sotelo, 1994). Eager to save money, men without wives or families moved in, six and seven to a room. Local landlords found they could make more money by charging per person rather than per rental unit. Like other single men living in tight quarters, they entertained themselves by drinking, hanging out on the street, and driving their cars around town. The activities of these single men provided important sources of narratives that differentiated Pluralists from Legalists. While some of the young men soon moved on to other towns or back to Mexico, many soon brought their families. Wives and children came, along with brothers, sisters, mothers, and fathers. This pattern is typical of Mexican migration to the U.S. (Mullan, 1988, 1989). The migrants viewed Marshalltown as a safe place, despite a number of INS raids in the late 1990s. The new family members who came were thrifty. Instead of sending their earnings back to Mexico, they now saved and invested locally. For example, Diego, age 48, came to Marshalltown from Mexico in 1994, two years after his brother was drawn to Marshalltown when he learned that the meat packing plant was expanding. A year later Elena, Diego's wife, moved from Mexico to Marshalltown and got a job at the meatpacking plant. They earned $6.00 an hour. By living frugally, they saved enough from those wages to buy a house. Granted, the house was in the old part of town near the packing plant, which sometimes produced extremely offensive odors, but it was their house. They were able to buy it with a $1,200 down payment. Local bankers facilitated their qualifying for the first-time homeowners' program and mortgage plan. 4

5 They continued to pay the mortgage on the house and to save. By 1996, they owned a second home, where Elena and Diego's two sons, two daughters-in-law, and six of their 22 grandchildren live. Their sons work in the plant, while their daughters-in-law stay home with the children. Many of the Mexican workers come from a single area in Michoacán and maintain ties there (Grey, 1999). They often return to Mexico, particularly in the first year of work and before more family members have joined them. When they go back to Mexico, they lose their jobs. If they come back to the plant, they must begin at the bottom again. Yet many go and come, despite the expense and difficulties (Grey, 1999; Lowell, 1992). Latino family networks gradually became denser in Marshalltown. Mueller and Sofranko (1999) found this to be true in Latino populations in small towns in Illinois. Family ties are most critical to a sense of community and a sense of place for Latino residents. Massey, in a recent editorial, demonstrates how stricter border controls without concomitant steps toward legalization will in fact trap these workers inside the U.S. President Bush has underlined the need to be both a welcoming nation AND a nation of laws (Ewing, 2005). Reconciliation between the two camps can lead to a positive and humane immigration reform. Both our economy and our consciences will be better off when over 12 million unauthorized individuals no longer live and work in fear and ambiguity. Legislation is needed to allow for a path towards citizenship. References Broadway, Michael J Beef stew: Cattle, immigrants and established residents in a beefpacking town in southwest Kansas. In L. Lamphere, A. Stepick, and G. Grenier (eds.), Newcomers in the Workplace: New Immigrants in the Restructuring of the U.S. Economy. Philadelphia: Temple University Press: Dalla, Rochelle and April Christensen Latino Immigrants Describe Residence in Rural Midwestern Packing Communities: A Longitudinal Assessment of Social and Economic Change. Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 27(1): Ewing, Walter A. May The Economics of Necessity: Economic Report of the President Underscores the Importance of Immigration. Immigration Policy in Focus 4 (3). accessed 3/24/06 Flora, C.B., J. Flora and R.J. Tapp Meat, Meth, and Mexicans: Community Responses to Increasing Ethnic Diversity. Journal of the Community Development Society. 31: Gouveia, Lourdes and Donald D. Stull Dances with cows: Beefpacking's impact on Garden City, Kansas, and Lexington, Nebraska. In L. Lamphere, A. Stepick, and G. Grenier (eds.), Newcomers in the Workplace: New Immigrants in the Restructuring of the U.S. Economy. Philadelphia: Temple University Press:

6 Grey, Mark A Immigrants, migration and worker turnover at the Hog Pride pork packing plant. Human Organization 58: Grey, Mark A Storm Lake, Iowa and the meatpacking revolution: Historical and ethnographic perspectives on a community in transition. In S. Stromquist and M. Bergman (eds.), In Unionizing the Jungles: Essays on Labor and Community in the Twentieth Century Meatpacking Industry. Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, pp Jan Flora 8/9/00 5:35 PM Deleted: Jan Flora 7/3/00 6:42 AM Deleted:. Grey, Mark A. and Anne C. Woodrick Latinos have Revitalized Our Community : Mexican Migration and Anglo Reponses in Marshalltown, Iowa. Pp in Zúñiga, Víctor and Rubén Hernández-León (eds.), New Destinations: Mexican Immigration in the United States. NY: Russell Sage Foundation. Griffin, David and Ed Kissam Working Poor: Farmworkers in the United States. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. Hagan, J. and Palloni, A Sociological Criminology and the Mythology of Hispanic Immigration and Crime. Social Problems 46(4): Hedgers, Stephen J The new jungle: IBP meat processing plant in storm Lake, Iowa relies on illegal Mexican labor. U.S. News and World Report 121(12), September 23: 34ff. Hondagneu-Sotelo, Pierrette Gendered Transitions: Mexican Experiences of Immigration. Berkeley: University of California Press. Johnson, Kenneth Demographic Trends in Rural and Small Town America. Carsey Institute Report on Rural America accessed March 28, Johnson-Webb, Karen D Employer Recruitment and Hispanic Labor Migration: North Carolina Urban Areas at the End of the Millenium. The Professional Geographer 54(3): Kandel, William Mexican Workers in U.S. Agriculture. In J. Durand and D.S. Massey (eds.) Crossing the Border: Research from the Mexican Migration Project. New York: Russell Sage Foundation. Kandel, William, and Emilio Parrado Restructuring of the US Meat Processing Industry and New Hispanic Migrant Destinations. Population and Development Review, 31(3):

7 Krissman, Fred Immigrant Labor Recruitment: U.S. Agribusiness and Undocumented Migration from Mexico. Pp in Foner, Nancy, Rubén G. Rumbaut, and Steven J. Gold (eds.), Immigration Research for a New Century. NY: Russell Sage Foundation. Krissman, Fred Sin Coyote Ni Patrón: Why the Migrant Network Fails to Explain International Migration. International Migration Review 39(1): Lowell, B. Lindsay Circular mobility, migrant communities, and policy restrictions: Unauthorized flows from Mexico. In Calvin Goldscheider (ed.), Migration, Population Structure, and Redistribution Policies. Westview Press: Boulder, Colorado. Maldonado, Marta María Harvesting the Fruits of Color Blindness: Racial Ideology in Employers Discourse and The Everyday Production Of Racial Inequality In Agricultural Work. Ph D. dissertation, Washington State University, Pullman, WA. Massey, Douglas S Five Myths about Immigration: Common Misconceptions Underlying U.S. Border-Enforcement Policy. Immigration Policy in Focus. 4 (6). accessed March 27, Massey, Douglas S., Jorge Durand, and Nolan J. Malone Beyond Smoke and Mirrors: American Immigration in an Era of Economic Integration. NY: Russell Sage Foundation. Mueller, Benjamin and Andrew Sofranko Integration of Mexican Immigrants in Rural Communities. Paper presented at the meeting of the Community Development Society, Spokane, WA. Mullan, B.P The impact of social networks on the occupational status of migrants. International Migration 27: Mullan, B. P Social mobility among migrants between Mexico and the U.S. and within the U.S. labor market. International Migration 26: Naples, Nancy Economic Restructuring and Racialization: Incorporating of Mexicans and Mexican Americans in the Rural Midwest. Working Paper 7, The Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, University of California, San Diego. Jan Flora 8/9/00 5:25 PM Deleted: Jan Flora 8/9/00 5:25 PM Deleted: National Immigration Law Center. DREAM Act Summary. April, df accessed March 27, 2006 Passel, Jeffrey S The Size and Characteristics of the Unauthorized Migrant Population in the U.S. Washington, DC: Pew Hispanic Center. accessed March 27,

8 Peri, Giovanni Immigrants, Skills and Wages: Measuring the Economic Gains from Immigration. Immigration Policy in Focus 5-3: accessed March 27, Rodríguez, Nestor Workers Wanted : Employer Recruitment of Immigrant Labor. Work and Occupations 31(4): Smith, James B. and Barry Edmonston (eds.) The New Americans: Economic, Demographic, and Fiscal Effects of Immigration. Washington, DC: National Research Council, National Academy of Science Press. Stull, Donald D Knock em' dead: Work on the kill floor of a modern beefpacking plant. In L.Lamphere, A. Stepick, and G. Grenier (eds.), Newcomers in the Workplace: New Immigrants in the Restructuring of the U.S. Economy. Philadelphia: Temple University Press: Waldinger, Roger and Michael I. Lichter How the Other Half Works: Immigration and the Social Organization of Labor. Berkeley: University of California Press 8

A Network for Economic Integration of Immigrants: Supporting Latino/as in Des Moines, IA

A Network for Economic Integration of Immigrants: Supporting Latino/as in Des Moines, IA A Network for Economic Integration of Immigrants: Supporting Latino/as in Des Moines, IA Johnny G. Alcivar Iowa State University Proceedings of the 13 th Annual Conference Latinos in the Heartland: Growing

More information

Integrating Latino Immigrants in New Rural Destinations. Movement to Rural Areas

Integrating Latino Immigrants in New Rural Destinations. Movement to Rural Areas ISSUE BRIEF T I M E L Y I N F O R M A T I O N F R O M M A T H E M A T I C A Mathematica strives to improve public well-being by bringing the highest standards of quality, objectivity, and excellence to

More information

Immigration Policy Brief August 2006

Immigration Policy Brief August 2006 Immigration Policy Brief August 2006 Last updated August 16, 2006 The Growth and Reach of Immigration New Census Bureau Data Underscore Importance of Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Force Introduction: by

More information

Immigration Scare-Tactics: Exaggerated Estimates Of New Immigration Under S.2611

Immigration Scare-Tactics: Exaggerated Estimates Of New Immigration Under S.2611 Immigration Scare-Tactics: Exaggerated Estimates Of New Immigration Under S.2611 by Ben Johnson for the Immigration Policy Center The debate over S. 2611, the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act, has

More information

Hispanic Population Growth and Rural Income Inequality

Hispanic Population Growth and Rural Income Inequality Hispanic Population and Rural Income Inequality Emilio Parrado, Department of Sociology, Duke University William Kandel, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture September 2006 Draft version:

More information

Agricultural Outlook Forum Presented: March 1-2, 2007 U.S. Department of Agriculture

Agricultural Outlook Forum Presented: March 1-2, 2007 U.S. Department of Agriculture Agricultural Outlook Forum Presented: March 1-2, 2007 U.S. Department of Agriculture IMMIGRATION REFORM AND AGRICULTURE William Kandel & Ashok Mishra Resource and Rural Economics Division Economic Research

More information

Immigration into the Carolinas by David Griffith

Immigration into the Carolinas by David Griffith Immigration into the Carolinas by David Griffith Overview of Southern Immigration! Recently portrayed as a New Immigrant Destination (Florida, Texas excluded)! Southern regions experiencing economic, demographic

More information

Understanding Immigration:

Understanding Immigration: Understanding Immigration: Key Issues in Immigration Debates and Prospects for Reform Presented by Judith Gans Immigration Policy Project Director judygans@email.arizona.edu Udall Center Immigration Program

More information

Ethnic Studies 135AC Contemporary U.S. Immigration Summer 2006, Session D Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (10:30am-1pm) 279 Dwinelle

Ethnic Studies 135AC Contemporary U.S. Immigration Summer 2006, Session D Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (10:30am-1pm) 279 Dwinelle Ethnic Studies 135AC Contemporary U.S. Immigration Summer 2006, Session D Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday (10:30am-1pm) 279 Dwinelle Instructor: Bao Lo Email: bao21@yahoo.com Mailbox: 506 Barrows Hall Office

More information

Immigration and the U.S. Economy

Immigration and the U.S. Economy Immigration and the U.S. Economy Bill Herrin, Ph.D. Director School of International Studies Professor of Economics University of the Pacific The last 200 years of U.S. Immigration in one chart Source:

More information

Policies, Work, and Community: Why Idaho Farmworkers Choose to Stay

Policies, Work, and Community: Why Idaho Farmworkers Choose to Stay Policies, Work, and Community: Why Idaho Farmworkers Choose to Stay Kimberly Luna: McNair Scholar Dr. Brian Wampler: Mentor Political Science Abstract Idaho s agricultural industries depend on Mexican

More information

Mexican Immigrant Political and Economic Incorporation. By Frank D. Bean University of California, Irvine

Mexican Immigrant Political and Economic Incorporation. By Frank D. Bean University of California, Irvine The Center for Comparative Immigration Studies University of California, San Diego CCIS Mexican Immigrant Political and Economic Incorporation By Frank D. Bean University of California, Irvine Susan K.

More information

THE DEMOGRAPHY OF MEXICO/U.S. MIGRATION

THE DEMOGRAPHY OF MEXICO/U.S. MIGRATION THE DEMOGRAPHY OF MEXICO/U.S. MIGRATION October 19, 2005 B. Lindsay Lowell, Georgetown University Carla Pederzini Villarreal, Universidad Iberoamericana Jeffrey Passel, Pew Hispanic Center * Presentation

More information

Written Testimony of

Written Testimony of Written Testimony of Dan Siciliano Executive Director, Program in Law, Economics, and Business Stanford Law School Senior Research Fellow, Immigration Policy Center American Immigration Law Foundation,

More information

Forest Management and the H2B Guest Worker Program in the Southeastern United States: An Assessment of Contractors and Their Crews

Forest Management and the H2B Guest Worker Program in the Southeastern United States: An Assessment of Contractors and Their Crews Forest Management and the H2B Guest Worker Program in the Southeastern United States: An Assessment of Contractors and Their Crews ABSTRACT Josh McDaniel and Vanessa Casanova Tree-planting jobs in the

More information

Immigrants are playing an increasingly

Immigrants are playing an increasingly Trends in the Low-Wage Immigrant Labor Force, 2000 2005 THE URBAN INSTITUTE March 2007 Randy Capps, Karina Fortuny The Urban Institute Immigrants are playing an increasingly important role in the U.S.

More information

Recent Trends in Rural-based Meat Processing

Recent Trends in Rural-based Meat Processing Recent Trends in Rural-based Meat Processing William Kandel, Economic Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture Presented at Immigration Reform: Implications for Farmers, Farm Workers, and Communities

More information

Immigration Facts. What Every Citizen Needs to Know

Immigration Facts. What Every Citizen Needs to Know Immigration Facts What Every Citizen Needs to Know 1 A salient characteristic of the current debate on U.S. immigration policy is the high ratio of hot air to data. Dr. Douglas Massey" Co-director, Mexican

More information

CURRICULUM VITAE. Jimy M. Sanders 2010

CURRICULUM VITAE. Jimy M. Sanders 2010 CURRICULUM VITAE Jimy M. Sanders 2010 Address Department of Sociology Sloan College University of South Carolina Columbia, SC 29208 Telephone 803-777-2030 (office and voice mail) 803-777-3123 (departmental

More information

8AMBER WAVES VOLUME 2 ISSUE 3

8AMBER WAVES VOLUME 2 ISSUE 3 8AMBER WAVES VOLUME 2 ISSUE 3 F E A T U R E William Kandel, USDA/ERS ECONOMIC RESEARCH SERVICE/USDA Rural s Employment and Residential Trends William Kandel wkandel@ers.usda.gov Constance Newman cnewman@ers.usda.gov

More information

Nebraska s Foreign Born and Hispanic/Latino Population

Nebraska s Foreign Born and Hispanic/Latino Population Nebraska s Foreign Born and Hispanic/ Demographic Trends, 1990 2008 January 15, 2010 Office of /Latin American Studies (OLLAS) University of Nebraska Omaha University of Nebraska Omaha Office of /Latin

More information

EDUCATING ABOUT IMMIGRATION Unauthorized Immigration and the U.S. Economy

EDUCATING ABOUT IMMIGRATION Unauthorized Immigration and the U.S. Economy Overview Students will role play editors at a newspaper. They are given the task of evaluating four letters to the editor sent in response to proposed legislation in Congress. The legislation streamlines

More information

Rural Poverty Research Center

Rural Poverty Research Center WORKING PAPER SERIES Beyond Gateway Cities: Economic Restructuring and Poverty Among Mexican Immigrant Families and Children Martha L. Crowley Daniel T. Lichter Zhenchao Qian RPRC Working Paper No.05-07

More information

Economics of Migration. John Palmer Pompeu Fabra University 2016

Economics of Migration. John Palmer Pompeu Fabra University 2016 Economics of Migration John Palmer Pompeu Fabra University 2016 I. Overview This course will explore migration from an economic perspective within a multidisciplinary context. It will introduce students

More information

Did Operation Streamline Slow Illegal Immigration?

Did Operation Streamline Slow Illegal Immigration? Did Operation Streamline Slow Illegal Immigration? Jesus Cañas Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Jesus.Canas@dal.frb.org Christina Daly Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Christina.Daly@dal.frb.org Pia Orrenius

More information

LATINO/A WEALTH AND LIVELIHOOD STRATEGIES IN RURAL MIDWESTERN COMMUNITIES

LATINO/A WEALTH AND LIVELIHOOD STRATEGIES IN RURAL MIDWESTERN COMMUNITIES 1 st Quarter 2012 27(1) LATINO/A WEALTH AND LIVELIHOOD STRATEGIES IN RURAL MIDWESTERN COMMUNITIES Corinne Valdivia, Stephen Jeanetta, Lisa Y. Flores, Alejandro Morales and Domingo Martinez JEL Classifications:

More information

Prior research finds that IRT policies increase college enrollment and completion rates among undocumented immigrant young adults.

Prior research finds that IRT policies increase college enrollment and completion rates among undocumented immigrant young adults. In-State Resident Tuition Policies for Undocumented Immigrants Kate Olson, Stephanie Potochnick Summary This brief examines the effects of in-state resident tuition (IRT) policies on high school dropout

More information

U.S. Hispanics & Immigration: A Demographer s View

U.S. Hispanics & Immigration: A Demographer s View Jeffrey S. Passel Pew Hispanic Center Washington, DC The Economics of Immigration Construction Economics Research Network Washington, DC December 6, 2007 U.S. Hispanics & Immigration: A Demographer s View

More information

Contemporary Immigration Soc 146. Winter Lecture: Tuesdays, Thursdays 2 3:15

Contemporary Immigration Soc 146. Winter Lecture: Tuesdays, Thursdays 2 3:15 Syllabus Contemporary Immigration Soc 146 Winter 2016 Lecture: Tuesdays, Thursdays 2 3:15 Instructor: Edward Telles Office: SSMS room 3423 Office Hours: Tuesdays, 3:30 5:30 Email: e telles@soc.ucsb.edu

More information

Latinos and the Economics of Immigration. By Paul McDaniel and Guillermo Cantor American Immigration Council

Latinos and the Economics of Immigration. By Paul McDaniel and Guillermo Cantor American Immigration Council Latinos and the Economics of Immigration By Paul McDaniel and Guillermo Cantor American Immigration Council Latinos have a heavy stake in the immigration debate. More than one-third (35.6 percent) of the

More information

COLORADO S GREEN, AG AND PROCESSING INDUSTRY EMPLOYMENT: TRENDS AND IMPORTANCE TO THE STATE

COLORADO S GREEN, AG AND PROCESSING INDUSTRY EMPLOYMENT: TRENDS AND IMPORTANCE TO THE STATE COLORADO S GREEN, AG AND PROCESSING INDUSTRY EMPLOYMENT: TRENDS AND IMPORTANCE TO THE STATE Jessica Hernandez, MS Student Dawn Thilmany, Professor Anita Pena, Asst Professor Martha Sullins, Small Farms

More information

Changing Dynamics and. to the United States

Changing Dynamics and. to the United States Jeffrey S. Passel Pew Hispanic Center Changing Dynamics and Characteristics of Immigration to the United States International Symposium on International Migration and Development United Nations, Torino,

More information

INTRODUCTION TO EMPLOYMENT IMMIGRATION ISSUES

INTRODUCTION TO EMPLOYMENT IMMIGRATION ISSUES INTRODUCTION TO EMPLOYMENT IMMIGRATION ISSUES GENICE A.G. RABE 4308 Orchard Heights Rd., N.W. Salem, Oregon 97302 503-371-6347 rabelaw@prodigy.net State Bar of Texas 17 th ANNUAL ADVANCED EMPLOYMENT LAW

More information

New Patterns in US Immigration, 2011:

New Patterns in US Immigration, 2011: Jeffrey S. Passel Pew Hispanic Center Washington, DC Immigration Reform: Implications for Farmers, Farm Workers, and Communities University of California, DC Washington, DC 12-13 May 2011 New Patterns

More information

University of Missouri. Cambio de Colores Conference Latinos and Immigrants in Midwestern Communities May, 2010 Columbia, Missouri

University of Missouri. Cambio de Colores Conference Latinos and Immigrants in Midwestern Communities May, 2010 Columbia, Missouri University of Missouri Cambio de Colores Conference Latinos and Immigrants in Midwestern Communities 24-26 May, 2010 Columbia, Missouri Data from the U.S. Census Bureau dmartinez@missouri.edu Large increases

More information

IMMIGRATION POLICY CENTER PERSPECTIVES BACK TO THE FUTURE THE IMPACT OF LEGALIZATION THEN AND NOW. By Dr. Sherrie A. Kossoudji, Ph.D.

IMMIGRATION POLICY CENTER PERSPECTIVES BACK TO THE FUTURE THE IMPACT OF LEGALIZATION THEN AND NOW. By Dr. Sherrie A. Kossoudji, Ph.D. IMMIGRATION POLICY CENTER A M E R I C A N I M M I G R AT I O N CO U N C I L PERSPECTIVES BACK TO THE FUTURE THE IMPACT OF LEGALIZATION THEN AND NOW By Dr. Sherrie A. Kossoudji, Ph.D. JANUARY 2013 Photo

More information

in the Labor Work Force

in the Labor Work Force Eastern Washington University EWU Digital Commons 2016 Symposium EWU Student Research and Creative Works Symposium 2016 Latin@s in the Labor Work Force Vanessa Murillo Eastern Washington University Follow

More information

Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Market

Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Market Eastern Washington University EWU Digital Commons 2016 Symposium EWU Student Research and Creative Works Symposium 2016 Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Market Samantha Zontek Eastern Washington University

More information

Soc Spring Tuesdays 3:30-5:20 LABOR RELATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES

Soc Spring Tuesdays 3:30-5:20 LABOR RELATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES Prof. Chris Rhomberg 302 Williams Hall Soc 342 - Spring 2003 203-432-3346 Tuesdays 3:30-5:20 Major Themes of the Course LABOR RELATIONS IN THE UNITED STATES This course examines historical and contemporary

More information

The Impact of Ebbing Immigration in Los Angeles: New Insights from an Established Gateway

The Impact of Ebbing Immigration in Los Angeles: New Insights from an Established Gateway The Impact of Ebbing Immigration in Los Angeles: New Insights from an Established Gateway Julie Park and Dowell Myers University of Southern California Paper proposed for presentation at the annual meetings

More information

This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and

This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and Glossary of Terms This section provides a brief explanation of major immigration and immigrant integration terms utilized in this report and in the field. The terms are organized in alphabetical order

More information

Nebraska s Foreign-Born and Hispanic/Latino Population

Nebraska s Foreign-Born and Hispanic/Latino Population January 2011 Nebraska s Foreign-Born and Hispanic/Latino Population Socio-Economic Trends, 2009 OLLAS Office of Latino/Latin American Studies (OLLAS) University of Nebraska - Omaha Off i c e o f La t i

More information

Hispanic Health Insurance Rates Differ between Established and New Hispanic Destinations

Hispanic Health Insurance Rates Differ between Established and New Hispanic Destinations Population Trends in Post-Recession Rural America A Publication Series of the W3001 Research Project Hispanic Health Insurance Rates Differ between and New Hispanic s Brief No. 02-16 August 2016 Shannon

More information

Does Immigration Reduce Wages?

Does Immigration Reduce Wages? Does Immigration Reduce Wages? Alan de Brauw One of the most prominent issues in the 2016 presidential election was immigration. All of President Donald Trump s policy proposals building the border wall,

More information

Immigration and the U.S. Economy

Immigration and the U.S. Economy Immigration and the U.S. Economy Pia M. Orrenius, Ph.D. Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas June 19, 2007 Mercatus Center, George Mason University Disclaimer: The views expressed herein are those of the presenter;

More information

OpenStax-CNX module: m Immigration * OpenStax. Abstract. By the end of this section, you will be able to:

OpenStax-CNX module: m Immigration * OpenStax. Abstract. By the end of this section, you will be able to: OpenStax-CNX module: m48693 1 Immigration * OpenStax This work is produced by OpenStax-CNX and licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 By the end of this section, you will be able to:

More information

The Puebla-Durham Corridor: New Destination Migration from Pahuatlán. David Griffith East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina

The Puebla-Durham Corridor: New Destination Migration from Pahuatlán. David Griffith East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina The Puebla-Durham Corridor: New Destination Migration from Pahuatlán David Griffith East Carolina University Greenville, North Carolina North Carolina as New Destination Durham-Pahuatlán is one of three

More information

Berkeley Review of Latin American Studies, Fall 2013

Berkeley Review of Latin American Studies, Fall 2013 Home Share to: Berkeley Review of Latin American Studies, Fall 2013 An American flag featuring the faces of immigrants on display at Ellis Island. (Photo by Ludovic Bertron.) IMMIGRATION The Economic Benefits

More information

Recent Demographic Trends in Nonmetropolitan America: First Evidence from the 2010 Census Executive Summary

Recent Demographic Trends in Nonmetropolitan America: First Evidence from the 2010 Census Executive Summary Recent Demographic Trends in Nonmetropolitan America: First Evidence from the 2010 Census Executive Summary Kenneth M. Johnson Department of Sociology and Carsey Institute University of New Hampshire This

More information

315 Ladd Office Hours MW Noon 2:30 pm, T TH 2 3 or whenever my door is open or by appointment

315 Ladd   Office Hours MW Noon 2:30 pm, T TH 2 3 or whenever my door is open or by appointment Robert Turner bturner@skidmore.edu 315 Ladd http://www.skidmore.edu/~bturner Office Hours MW Noon 2:30 pm, T TH 2 3 or whenever my door is open or by appointment Immigration Politics and Policy GO 367

More information

Characteristics of the Ethnographic Sample of First- and Second-Generation Latin American Immigrants in the New York to Philadelphia Urban Corridor

Characteristics of the Ethnographic Sample of First- and Second-Generation Latin American Immigrants in the New York to Philadelphia Urban Corridor Table 2.1 Characteristics of the Ethnographic Sample of First- and Second-Generation Latin American Immigrants in the New York to Philadelphia Urban Corridor Characteristic Females Males Total Region of

More information

When Less is More: Border Enforcement and Undocumented Migration Testimony of Douglas S. Massey

When Less is More: Border Enforcement and Undocumented Migration Testimony of Douglas S. Massey When Less is More: Border Enforcement and Undocumented Migration Testimony of Douglas S. Massey before the Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law Committee

More information

The Real Hispanic Challenge

The Real Hispanic Challenge 3 The Real Hispanic Challenge With President Obama s recent announcement that longterm unauthorized immigrants will be allowed to remain in the country without fear of deportation, the debate on immigration

More information

IDAHO AT A GLANCE. Community Impacts of Dairy Workers. Highlights. Background. May 2017, Vol. 8, No. 3. McClure Center for Public Policy Research

IDAHO AT A GLANCE. Community Impacts of Dairy Workers. Highlights. Background. May 2017, Vol. 8, No. 3. McClure Center for Public Policy Research McClure Center for Public Policy Research IDAHO AT A GLANCE Community Impacts of Dairy Workers May 2017, Vol. 8, No. 3 Highlights With its predominantly Hispanic workforce, south central s dairy industry

More information

Snapshots of the past

Snapshots of the past OVERVIEW State of Ohio, City of Dayton and Dayton area counties immigration patterns: not a site of immigrant destination until recently 9 Focus Groups comprised of 1st gen 6 of Latinos Interviews with

More information

Managing Migration and Integration: Europe and the US March 9, 2012

Managing Migration and Integration: Europe and the US March 9, 2012 Managing Migration and Integration: Europe and the US March 9, 2012 MIGRANTS IN EUROPE... 1 ECONOMIC EFFECTS OF MIGRANTS... 3 INTEGRATION POLICIES: GERMANY... 4 INTEGRATION POLICIES: US... 5 Most Americans

More information

You ve probably heard a lot of talk about

You ve probably heard a lot of talk about Issues of Unauthorized Immigration You ve probably heard a lot of talk about unauthorized immigration. It is often also referred to as illegal immigration or undocumented immigration. For the last 30 years,

More information

Unauthorized Aliens in the United States: Estimates Since 1986

Unauthorized Aliens in the United States: Estimates Since 1986 Order Code RS21938 Updated January 24, 2007 Unauthorized Aliens in the United States: Estimates Since 1986 Summary Ruth Ellen Wasem Specialist in Immigration Policy Domestic Social Policy Division Estimates

More information

Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Spring 2018

Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Spring 2018 Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Spring 2018 Course Number: 37:575:307:01 Day and Time: Monday/Thursday

More information

Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Fall 2016

Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Fall 2016 Syllabus Latino Workers in the U.S. Labor Studies and Employment Relations School of Management and Labor Relations, Rutgers University Fall 2016 Course Number: 37:575:307:02 Day and Time: Wednesdays 9:50

More information

Friday Session: 8:45 10:15 am

Friday Session: 8:45 10:15 am The Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute Friday Session: 8:45 10:15 am Hispanic Immigration in the Rocky Mountain West 8:45 10:15 a.m. Friday, March 10, 2006 Sturm College of Law/Frank J. Ricketson Law Building

More information

Police-Latino Community Relations: Addressing Challenges in Rural Communities

Police-Latino Community Relations: Addressing Challenges in Rural Communities Police-Latino Community Relations: Addressing Challenges in Rural Communities Leigh Culver University of Nebraska-Omaha Proceedings of the 2nd Annual Conference Latinos in Missouri: Neighbors in Urban

More information

6/8/2015. Webinar Guidelines. Partners and Sponsors

6/8/2015. Webinar Guidelines. Partners and Sponsors Webinar Guidelines You will be listening to this webinar over your computer speakers. There is no need to call in. There is a chat box located on the lower right side of your screen for the live webinar.

More information

Newcomer and Receiving Communities Perspectives on Latino Immigrant Acculturation in Community B

Newcomer and Receiving Communities Perspectives on Latino Immigrant Acculturation in Community B Newcomer and Receiving Communities Perspectives on Latino Immigrant Acculturation in Community B Corinne B. Valdivia (PI), Lisa Y. Flores (Co-PI), Stephen C. Jeanetta (Co-PI), Alejandro Morales, Marvyn

More information

Does Immigration Help or Hurt Less-Educated Americans? Testimony of Harry J. Holzer before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee

Does Immigration Help or Hurt Less-Educated Americans? Testimony of Harry J. Holzer before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee Does Immigration Help or Hurt Less-Educated Americans? Testimony of Harry J. Holzer before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee April 25, 2006 The views expressed are those of the author and should not

More information

U.S. Immigration Policy Political Science 126C / Chicano/Latino Studies 163 Fall 2010

U.S. Immigration Policy Political Science 126C / Chicano/Latino Studies 163 Fall 2010 U.S. Immigration Policy Political Science 126C / Chicano/Latino Studies 163 Fall 2010 Professor Louis DeSipio Office Hours: Tuesdays, 2-3:30 and by appointment SSPB 5283 824-1420 LDESIPIO@UCI.EDU Class

More information

Immigration and Language

Immigration and Language NATIONAL CENTER ON IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION POLICY Immigration and Language Michael Fix Michael Fix Senior Vice President Earl Warren Institute University of California, Berkeley May 4, 2009 Points of Departure

More information

IMMIGRATION AND THE ECONOMY P ART I

IMMIGRATION AND THE ECONOMY P ART I federal reserve I SSUE JULY/A UGUST 1998 w e h s t t t u o s e e c o n y m o bank of dallas IMMIGRATION AND THE ECONOMY P ART I INSIDE What s New About the New Economy? Latin American Central Banking:

More information

Migrant s insertion and settlement in the host societies as a multifaceted phenomenon:

Migrant s insertion and settlement in the host societies as a multifaceted phenomenon: Background Paper for Roundtable 2.1 Migration, Diversity and Harmonious Society Final Draft November 9, 2016 One of the preconditions for a nation, to develop, is living together in harmony, respecting

More information

History of Immigration to Texas

History of Immigration to Texas History of Immigration to Texas For most of its history, Texas has attracted settlers from the rest of the nation rather than abroad Mexican immigrants did not begin to settle permanently until late 1970s

More information

Extended Abstract. The Demographic Components of Growth and Diversity in New Hispanic Destinations

Extended Abstract. The Demographic Components of Growth and Diversity in New Hispanic Destinations Extended Abstract The Demographic Components of Growth and Diversity in New Hispanic Destinations Daniel T. Lichter Departments of Policy Analysis & Management and Sociology Cornell University Kenneth

More information

Recent Trends in the Market for Hired Farm Labor in the United States

Recent Trends in the Market for Hired Farm Labor in the United States Recent Trends in the Market for Hired Farm Labor in the United States Steven Zahniser, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Economic Research Service, 1800 M Street NW, Rm. N5134, Washington, DC 20036-5831,

More information

Lourdes Gouveia, Ph.D., OLLAS, University of Nebraska at Omaha

Lourdes Gouveia, Ph.D., OLLAS, University of Nebraska at Omaha The ability to move is a dimension of human freedom and a component of human development Human Development Report, 2009 Lourdes Gouveia, Ph.D., OLLAS, University of Nebraska at Omaha www.unomaha.edu/ollas

More information

18 Pathways Spring 2015

18 Pathways Spring 2015 18 Pathways Spring 215 Pathways Spring 215 19 Revisiting the Americano Dream BY Van C. Tran A decade ago, the late political scientist Samuel Huntington concluded his provocative thought piece on Latinos

More information

Evaluating Methods for Estimating Foreign-Born Immigration Using the American Community Survey

Evaluating Methods for Estimating Foreign-Born Immigration Using the American Community Survey Evaluating Methods for Estimating Foreign-Born Immigration Using the American Community Survey By C. Peter Borsella Eric B. Jensen Population Division U.S. Census Bureau Paper to be presented at the annual

More information

Migration. Why do people move and what are the consequences of that move?

Migration. Why do people move and what are the consequences of that move? Migration Why do people move and what are the consequences of that move? The U.S. and Canada have been prominent destinations for immigrants. In the 18 th and 19 th century, Europeans were attracted here

More information

Illinois: State-by-State Immigration Trends Introduction Foreign-Born Population Educational Attainment

Illinois: State-by-State Immigration Trends Introduction Foreign-Born Population Educational Attainment Illinois: State-by-State Immigration Trends Courtesy of the Humphrey School of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota Prepared in 2012 for the Task Force on US Economic Competitiveness at Risk:

More information

PIONEER AND SETTLER MIGRATION IN THE NEW MEXICAN MIGRANT STATES. Mark Leach Frank D. Bean Susan Brown

PIONEER AND SETTLER MIGRATION IN THE NEW MEXICAN MIGRANT STATES. Mark Leach Frank D. Bean Susan Brown PIONEER AND SETTLER MIGRATION IN THE NEW MEXICAN MIGRANT STATES Mark Leach Frank D. Bean Susan Brown Department of Sociology University of California, Irvine Irvine, CA 92697-5100 For the Population Association

More information

ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS

ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS ESTIMATES OF INTERGENERATIONAL LANGUAGE SHIFT: SURVEYS, MEASURES, AND DOMAINS Jennifer M. Ortman Department of Sociology University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Presented at the Annual Meeting of the

More information

Period 5: TEACHER PLANNING TOOL. AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework Evidence Planner

Period 5: TEACHER PLANNING TOOL. AP U.S. History Curriculum Framework Evidence Planner 1491 1607 1607 1754 1754 1800 1800 1848 1844 1877 1865 1898 1890 1945 1945 1980 1980 Present TEACHER PLANNING TOOL Period 5: 1844 1877 As the nation expanded and its population grew, regional tensions,

More information

The Latino Population of the New York Metropolitan Area,

The Latino Population of the New York Metropolitan Area, The Latino Population of the New York Metropolitan Area, 2000 2008 Center for Latin American, Caribbean & Latino Studies Graduate Center City University of New York 365 Fifth Avenue Room 5419 New York,

More information

Chapter 1: The Demographics of McLennan County

Chapter 1: The Demographics of McLennan County Chapter 1: The Demographics of McLennan County General Population Since 2000, the Texas population has grown by more than 2.7 million residents (approximately 15%), bringing the total population of the

More information

LATINOS THROUGHOUT THE CITY: A SNAPSHOT OF SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES IN OMAHA, NEBRASKA

LATINOS THROUGHOUT THE CITY: A SNAPSHOT OF SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES IN OMAHA, NEBRASKA LATINOS THROUGHOUT THE CITY: A SNAPSHOT OF SOCIO-DEMOGRAPHIC DIFFERENCES IN OMAHA, NEBRASKA Prepared by Jasney Cogua-Lopez, Lissette Aliaga-Linares and Lourdes Gouveia. Office of Latino/Latin American

More information

The Connection between Immigration and Crime

The Connection between Immigration and Crime Testimony before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on the Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law Hearing on Comprehensive Immigration

More information

US Undocumented Population Drops Below 11 Million in 2014, with Continued Declines in the Mexican Undocumented Population

US Undocumented Population Drops Below 11 Million in 2014, with Continued Declines in the Mexican Undocumented Population Drops Below 11 Million in 2014, with Continued Declines in the Mexican Undocumented Population Robert Warren Center for Migration Studies Executive Summary Undocumented immigration has been a significant

More information

Unemployment Rises Sharply Among Latino Immigrants in 2008

Unemployment Rises Sharply Among Latino Immigrants in 2008 Report February 12, 2009 Unemployment Rises Sharply Among Latino Immigrants in 2008 Rakesh Kochhar Associate Director for Research, Pew Hispanic Center The Pew Hispanic Center is a nonpartisan research

More information

Hispanic Employment in Construction

Hispanic Employment in Construction Hispanic Employment in Construction Published by the CPWR Data Center The recent economic downturn affected the entire U.S. construction industry. To better understand how Hispanic construction workers

More information

Replacing the Undocumented Work Force

Replacing the Undocumented Work Force Replacing the Undocumented Work Force David A. Jaeger, Ph.D. Center for American Progress March 2006 Replacing the Undocumented Work Force By David A. Jaeger, Ph.D. i I. Introduction Perhaps no aspect

More information

Demographic Change How the US is Coping with Aging, Immigration, and Other Challenges William H. Frey

Demographic Change How the US is Coping with Aging, Immigration, and Other Challenges William H. Frey Demographic Change How the US is Coping with Aging, Immigration, and Other Challenges William H. Frey Brookings Institution University of Michigan www.frey-demographer.org US: Total and Age 65+ Growth,

More information

New Americans in. By Walter A. Ewing, Ph.D. and Guillermo Cantor, Ph.D.

New Americans in. By Walter A. Ewing, Ph.D. and Guillermo Cantor, Ph.D. New Americans in the VOTING Booth The Growing Electoral Power OF Immigrant Communities By Walter A. Ewing, Ph.D. and Guillermo Cantor, Ph.D. Special Report October 2014 New Americans in the VOTING Booth:

More information

UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION IN A NEW DESTINATION: UTAH FIFTH INTERIM REPORT TO THE RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION APRIL 30, 2011

UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION IN A NEW DESTINATION: UTAH FIFTH INTERIM REPORT TO THE RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION APRIL 30, 2011 UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION IN A NEW DESTINATION: UTAH FIFTH INTERIM REPORT TO THE RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION APRIL 30, 2011 The project received a no cost extension until July 14, 2011. Thus this

More information

COVER STORY IMMIGRATION TO MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE. Sally Ward UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

COVER STORY IMMIGRATION TO MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE. Sally Ward UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE 4 spring 2015 COVER STORY IMMIGRATION TO MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE Sally Ward UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Immigration, historically important for Manchester s economy, today means a younger, more diverse

More information

Mexican Migrant Workers in the 20th Century By Jessica McBirney 2016

Mexican Migrant Workers in the 20th Century By Jessica McBirney 2016 Name: Class: Mexican Migrant Workers in the 20th Century By Jessica McBirney 2016 The United States is a nation made up of people with many different backgrounds. Since Mexico is a neighboring country,

More information

How Should Immigration Affect the Economy? A D A M M. Z A R E T S K Y

How Should Immigration Affect the Economy? A D A M M. Z A R E T S K Y The by A D A M M. Z A R E T S K Y T he number of immigrants entering the United States legally is greater today than it was at the turn of the century. In fact, after peaking in the early 1900s and registering

More information

2015 Working Paper Series

2015 Working Paper Series Bowling Green State University The Center for Family and Demographic Research http://www.bgsu.edu/organizations/cfdr Phone: (419) 372-7279 cfdr@bgsu.edu 2015 Working Paper Series FERTILITY DIFFERENTIALS

More information

GENDER DIFFERENCES IN THE DESTINATION CHOICES OF LABOR MIGRANTS: MEXICAN MIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES IN THE 1990s

GENDER DIFFERENCES IN THE DESTINATION CHOICES OF LABOR MIGRANTS: MEXICAN MIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES IN THE 1990s GENDER DIFFERENCES IN THE DESTINATION CHOICES OF LABOR MIGRANTS: MEXICAN MIGRATION TO THE UNITED STATES IN THE 1990s Mark A. Leach Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology Population Research

More information

Prophetic City: Houston on the Cusp of a Changing America.

Prophetic City: Houston on the Cusp of a Changing America. Prophetic City: Houston on the Cusp of a Changing America. Tracking Responses to the Economic and Demographic Transformations through 36 Years of Houston Surveys Dr. Stephen L. Klineberg TACA 63rd Annual

More information

Five Myths About Immigration: Common Misconceptions Underlying US Border-Enforcement Policy by Douglas S. Massey

Five Myths About Immigration: Common Misconceptions Underlying US Border-Enforcement Policy by Douglas S. Massey Five Myths About Immigration: Common Misconceptions Underlying US Border-Enforcement Policy by Douglas S. Massey Executive Summary The current crisis of undocumented immigration to the United States has

More information

RACIAL-ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND SOCIOECONOMIC PROSPERITY IN U.S. COUNTIES

RACIAL-ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND SOCIOECONOMIC PROSPERITY IN U.S. COUNTIES RACIAL-ETHNIC DIVERSITY AND SOCIOECONOMIC PROSPERITY IN U.S. COUNTIES Luke T. Rogers, Andrew Schaefer and Justin R. Young * University of New Hampshire EXTENDED ABSTRACT Submitted to the Population Association

More information

Responding to Crises

Responding to Crises Responding to Crises UNU WIDER, 23-24 September 2016 The Economics of Forced Migrations Insights from Lebanon Gilles Carbonnier The Graduate Institute Geneva Red thread Gap between the reality of the Syrian

More information