California, District 28

California, District 28

Naturalization Helps Immigrants and the United States Reach Full Potential

Naturalization Helps Immigrants and the United States Reach Full Potential

By Karen Aho, Consultant and Anna Shepperson, Research Associate When Sri Lankan business analyst Dinesh Prabaharan became a U.S. citizen in December of 2023, he expressed his gratitude at finally being able to call America his home “without restriction.” “As newly minted citizens,” he added, “we not only… Read More

Supporting Detained Individual’s Right to Access ICE Detention Records through a State FOIA Request

Supporting Detained Individual’s Right to Access ICE Detention Records through a State FOIA Request

In the amicus brief, the Council and partners reject Calhoun County's position to withhold records that otherwise would be released under the Michigan state FOIA. Read More

New Americans in Detroit

New Americans in Detroit

While recent Census reports show continued population loss for the city, an NAE & Global Detroit report highlights that immigrants, who have added over 4,000 new residents to the city between 2010 and 2014 (a 12.1 percent rate of growth), are helping the city to stop its… Read More

Crain’s Detroit Business: Report highlights immigrants’ economic contribution  to Detroit

Crain’s Detroit Business: Report highlights immigrants’ economic contribution to Detroit

Following the uproar over President Donald Trump’s now-stalled executive order on limiting immigration from certain Middle East nations, Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan reaffirmed the city’s commitment to immigrants. New data released Tuesday makes the case for why. While the city continued to lose native-born residents between 2010 and 2014, its… Read More

Chinese Immigrant Headed Straight Where U.S. Needs Her: Information Technology

Chinese Immigrant Headed Straight Where U.S. Needs Her: Information Technology

Chinese immigrant Ping Ting has big dreams — but also a practical head on her shoulders. When she arrived in Brooklyn in 2016, she investigated the fields with the most employment opportunities and settled on information technology, ideally in the medical sector. It’s a smart move. To remain competitive in… Read More

One Refugee Couple, Dozens of Entrepreneurial Stories

One Refugee Couple, Dozens of Entrepreneurial Stories

Nadia Kasvin came to the United States under the terms of the Lautenberg Amendment, a 1989 policy that allowed Jews and other religious minorities facing persecution in the former Soviet Union to seek asylum in America. Three years after applying, and after numerous background checks and interviews, Kasvin and her… Read More

Virginia Entrepreneur Works Overtime to Help Other Immigrants Succeed

Virginia Entrepreneur Works Overtime to Help Other Immigrants Succeed

Thirty years ago, Fanny Smedile left behind a successful cafe she owned in Ecuador to flee an abusive husband. Despite knowing no English, she applied for a visa to join a cousin in New Jersey and found work there as a nanny and housekeeper, including for a professional football player. Read More

The Contributions of New Americans in Maryland

The Contributions of New Americans in Maryland

With its close proximity to our nation’s capital, it is of little surprise that Maryland has emerged in recent years as a popular destination for the country’s immigrants. In 1990, immigrants made up 6.6 percent of the state’s total population. By 2010, that number had more than doubled, reaching 13.9… Read More

Esteemed Scholar and Khmer Rouge Refugee Speaks to Value Immigrants Bring a Country

Esteemed Scholar and Khmer Rouge Refugee Speaks to Value Immigrants Bring a Country

When it comes to immigration, noted professor and political scientist Dr. Sophal Ear recalls a statement on Indochinese refugees made by former U.S. Secretary of State Cyrus Vance. “He was basically saying that America is a nation of refugees,” Dr. Ear says. “His point was, everybody who has come to… Read More

Editor of Iowa’s Largest Spanish-Language Newspaper Living Proof of Value Undocumented Immigrants Bring to Rural America

Editor of Iowa’s Largest Spanish-Language Newspaper Living Proof of Value Undocumented Immigrants Bring to Rural America

As founder and editor of La Prensa, Iowa’s largest Spanish-language newspaper, Lorena Lopez has interviewed everyone from former President Barack Obama to former Governor Jeb Bush and become a sought-after expert on Iowa’s increasingly influential Latino voters. Lopez has plenty of experience: She worked for 11 years as… Read More

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