Thorp Signs Letter Advocating for Simpler Immigration Process for Students

Thorp Signs Letter Advocating for Simpler Immigration Process for Students

The Daily Tarheel July 4, 2012 A hundred university leaders signed a letter demanding a streamlined immigration process for international graduating students in fields of science, technology, engineering and mathematics. UNC-Chapel Hill Chancellor Holden Thorp and UNC-system President Thomas Ross were some of the signatories to the letter, which… Read More

Study Finds That Foreign-Born Inventors Play Prominent Role at Top U.S. Patent-Producing Universities

Study Finds That Foreign-Born Inventors Play Prominent Role at Top U.S. Patent-Producing Universities

Patent Docs July 4, 2012 A study commissioned by the Partnership for a New American Economy, a bipartisan group of mayors from across the country and business leaders from all sectors of the economy seeking to raise awareness of the economic benefits of sensible immigration reform, shows that 76%… Read More

Groups Seek Information on CBP’s

Groups Seek Information on CBP’s “Translation” Activities in Northern Border States

Washington, D.C. – Last week an alliance of immigration advocacy groups represented by the Legal Action Center filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests with U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). The FOIA requests seek information regarding CBP policies on providing translation assistance to other law enforcement agencies and on… Read More

Impressive Stats About Foreign-Born Innovators

Impressive Stats About Foreign-Born Innovators

Free Enterprise July 2, 2012 A Partnership for a New American Economy study finds that foreign-born scientists and engineers are doing a lot to help the U.S. innovate and stay globally competitive. The report looked at the role that foreign-born scholars, faculty, and students play at the top ten… Read More

Georgia Labor Commissioner: Immigration System Needs an Overhaul

Georgia Labor Commissioner: Immigration System Needs an Overhaul

Global Atlanta July 2, 2012 Growing up in the country, Georgia Labor Commissioner Mark Butler learned just when to pluck fruit from the tree or put the sickle to a stalk. “I’ve picked corn, I’ve picked tomatoes, I’ve picked apples, pears, watermelons, canteloupes, I mean you name it. I… Read More

Universities Seek US Residency for Foreign Grad Students

Universities Seek US Residency for Foreign Grad Students

WRAL June 29, 2012 More than 100 university presidents nationwide have asked President Barack Obama and Congress for legislation that would allow foreign-born students to remain in the U.S. after graduation. Duke University President Richard Brodhead, who signed the appeal along with University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill… Read More

Green Card Waits Grow Worse for Skilled Immigrants

Green Card Waits Grow Worse for Skilled Immigrants

India West June 29, 2012 Skilled foreign nationals have seen no improvement in their prospects of obtaining Green Cards and wait times will likely increase in employment-based immigration categories, according to a report by the Arlington, Va.-based National Foundation for American Policy, a policy research group. An October 2011… Read More

Immigrants and Small Business

Immigrants and Small Business

New York Times June 30, 2012 Immigrants are known as entrepreneurial people, for obvious reasons: those with the ambition and energy to uproot themselves and build new lives in a distant land are well equipped to build businesses and the economy, too. That is the common wisdom, anyway, which… Read More

Ohio’s Immigrant Workforce Lags U.S.

Ohio’s Immigrant Workforce Lags U.S.

Dayton Daily News July 1, 2012 In the last 20 years in Ohio, the number of immigrant workers has more than doubled and the number of immigrant small business owners increased by more than 60 percent, according to a new report. But an analysis by the Dayton Daily News… Read More

Another Thing Immigrants Do for the Economy: Invent Cool Things

Another Thing Immigrants Do for the Economy: Invent Cool Things

Bloomberg BusinessWeek July 1, 2012 Each year the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office awards about 200,000 patents to inventors. Last year a Stanford student built a camera that lets users change what’s in focus after snapping a shot; Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers invented a tiny, foldable car; and… Read More

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