Stories

Stories

University Students Embrace Immigrant Culture — to America’s Benefit

University Students Embrace Immigrant Culture — to America’s Benefit

In 15 years, Zoya Khan has taught more than 1,500 university students. “In my classes, I have first-generation students, honors students, single mothers,” she says. “It’s a diverse group, and I take pride in their achievements.” Khan, an associate professor of Spanish at the University of South Alabama, in Mobile,… Read More

Immigrants Bring an Alabama Town Back to Life

Immigrants Bring an Alabama Town Back to Life

Ashley Cummins has lived in Russellville, Alabama, her entire life. When she was young, the downtown area was “full of people in the streets and in the shops,” she says. Slowly, though, the once-popular shopping district transformed into “a ghost town.” “People just didn’t have the time and money to… Read More

Louisiana Congregation To Muslim Neighbors: ‘We’re Glad You’re Here’

Louisiana Congregation To Muslim Neighbors: ‘We’re Glad You’re Here’

Little Flower Church, a 350-member Roman Catholic congregation located in Monroe, Louisiana, cares deeply about its neighbors. Its annual budget of around $270,000 runs the church’s food bank, and its preschool and daycare center receives an additional $430,000 each year from the city’s department of education. This is why, following… Read More

Military Veteran: Discouraging Foreign Students Threatens U.S. Future

Military Veteran: Discouraging Foreign Students Threatens U.S. Future

Fear. That’s the main thing Jim Mather says the international student population at the University of South Alabama is feeling right now, given the uncertain  state of the American immigration system. As director of Friends of Internationals — a student ministry and community organization — he works… Read More

ESL Students — and Immigrant Families — Excel in Kentucky

ESL Students — and Immigrant Families — Excel in Kentucky

Roughly 14 percent of students in Kentucky’s Bowling Green Independent School District are immigrants or refugees, a statistic associate superintendent Vicki Writsel is particularly proud of. “It serves our students well that our school district is so diverse,” she says. “When they graduate, they are prepared to work with people… Read More

After Accepting Immigrants, Kentucky Thrives

After Accepting Immigrants, Kentucky Thrives

Since the city of Owensboro, Kentucky, began helping immigrants and refugees secure employment and affordable housing, something has happened: the local economy has grown 6 percent and unemployment has dropped to one of the lowest rates in the state. “A lot of these folks are entrepreneurs at heart,” says Joe… Read More

Refugees Learn English — Then Buoy Kentucky Economy

Refugees Learn English — Then Buoy Kentucky Economy

It’s been four decades since Skip Cleavinger moved to Bowling Green to study at Western Kentucky University, and in that time he has witnessed a significant shift in the demographics of west-central Kentucky. A local refugee resettlement program and a livable community — with job opportunities, strong schools, and a… Read More

A Lone Face of Diversity Brings Art to a Small New York Town

A Lone Face of Diversity Brings Art to a Small New York Town

In Perry, New York, where she serves as the executive director of the Arts Council for Wyoming County, Jackie Hoyt is one of the few non-white, immigrant faces. There, she makes an important contribution to the community of 41,000 by creating a diverse program that… Read More

A Sociologist Does the Math on Immigration Reform

A Sociologist Does the Math on Immigration Reform

Filiz Garip is fascinated by the unintended consequences of public policy. Take border security. “When you propose something like a wall, it feels like a great solution,” says Garip, a sociology professor at Cornell University. But her research suggests otherwise. Consider that in 1965 there were… Read More

Unintended Consequences: When U.S. Blocks Access, Fewer Unauthorized Immigrants Leave America

Unintended Consequences: When U.S. Blocks Access, Fewer Unauthorized Immigrants Leave America

David Molina, a professor at the University of North Texas, is the product of two cultures. Born in Detroit, Molina was raised by an American mother and a Mexican father, who was in Michigan to complete a medical residency. The family moved to Mexico City when Molina was… Read More

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