Uncategorized

Uncategorized

The Biden Administration Let Over 200,000 Green Cards Go to Waste This Year

The Biden Administration Let Over 200,000 Green Cards Go to Waste This Year

The Biden administration failed to issue more than 200,000 permanent resident visas (or “green cards”) that were allotted in fiscal year 2021 for immigrants sponsored by U.S. employers or family members. Roughly 150,000 visas for family-based immigrants and as many as 80,000 visas for employment-based immigrants had gone… Read More

New Enforcement Priorities Show Some Improvement, Maintain Old Framework

New Enforcement Priorities Show Some Improvement, Maintain Old Framework

On September 30, Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas issued the long-awaited new set of enforcement priorities, entitled “Guidelines for the Enforcement of Civil Immigration Laws.” The guidelines, which will go into effect on November 29, 2021, will replace the February 18 interim enforcement priorities memo issued to… Read More

NAE Web Development Internship

NAE Web Development Internship

New American Economy is seeking a remote, paid Web Design and Front-End Development Intern to assist with updating content on our websites, collaborating on building new site features, and making front-end and back-end code updates when necessary. Individuals who are self-starters, strong… Read More

Read the 2021 'Celebrate America' Creative Writing Contest Winning Entry

Read the 2021 ‘Celebrate America’ Creative Writing Contest Winning Entry

The first-place winner of the American Immigration Council’s 24th annual (2020-2021) Celebrate America Creative Writing Contest was Kyla O’Halloran, whose poem “Welcome: Two Syllables, One Word” was submitted by the Chicago Chapter. Kyla’s poem examines the impact a simple, welcoming message can have on someone’s life. Welcome: Two Syllables,… Read More

Haitian Nationals Win a Reprieve in the Form of TPS

Haitian Nationals Win a Reprieve in the Form of TPS

The Biden administration announced that eligible Haitians currently living in the United States can once again apply for Temporary Protected Status (TPS). Those individuals who qualify for TPS can live and work in the United States for a period of 18 months. The Trump administration tried to end TPS… Read More

A Diverse Sisterhood of Strangers Showed Me How Pluralism Works

A Diverse Sisterhood of Strangers Showed Me How Pluralism Works

Two years ago, I joined a Sisterhood of Salaam Shalom local chapter in Manhattan. The Sisterhood brings together equal numbers of Jewish and Muslim women in intimate chapters of between 10-20 members, all across America.  The goal is to build personal bonds, improve knowledge and literacy about the two… Read More

Overcoming Polarization: How to Talk with Immigration Opponents

Overcoming Polarization: How to Talk with Immigration Opponents

Immigration has never been more polarized. But it wasn’t always that way. In 2005, Republicans and Democrats were only about five percentage points apart in their views on immigration. By 2019, that gap had widened to 47%. Currently, 78% of Democrats regard immigration as positive, while only 31%… Read More

Non-Judgmental Listening and Story Sharing Can Durably Change Attitudes Around Contentious Issues

Non-Judgmental Listening and Story Sharing Can Durably Change Attitudes Around Contentious Issues

Ushering in a more just and inclusive America can seem like a daunting prospect in a time of heightened conflict and division. Polarization creates incentives for each camp to hunker down, look inward, and activate its in-group or base. The self-perpetuating and self-reinforcing nature of this oppositional cycle makes… Read More

How Extreme Political Division Cripples a Democracy and What To Do About It

How Extreme Political Division Cripples a Democracy and What To Do About It

Entrenched polarization, i.e., extreme political division, is a fixture of public discourse and attitudes in America today. When the pandemic surfaced in March, many wondered whether it would foster greater solidarity across traditional fault lines and divides (e.g., red/blue, rural/urban, rich/poor U.S. born/immigrant), exacerbate existing divisions, or create new ones. Read More

What Social Justice Movements Can Learn from the Medical Response to the Coronavirus

What Social Justice Movements Can Learn from the Medical Response to the Coronavirus

Across the country, communities are responding to the coronavirus pandemic by working to protect our poor, elderly, and compromised. Critical to the response are the efforts of the medical and scientific community. Thousands of doctors, nurses, and other medical professionals from diverse backgrounds–including reenlisting retirees–are serving on the frontline… Read More

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg