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Immigration: Who The U.S. Lets In, And Why

NPR August 27, 2012 America’s economy would be better off if the U.S. admitted more highly skilled workers, James Surowiecki recently argued in the New Yorker. That got us thinking: How does the U.S. compare to the rest of the developed world when it comes to immigration policy? The short answer: The U.S. mostly lets […]

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Tech to the rescue STEM industries can lead the charge in reviving Maryland’s economy

The Baltimore Sun August 27, 2012 The increasingly hyperbolic diatribes in the presidential campaigns have drowned out any focus on the single most important issue on Maryland voters’ minds: jobs. It’s time to stop the political attacks and put forward ideas to attack the economy’s core problems. To help, the high-tech sector, at TechElect.org, has […]

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Immigration rules expel the people we need the most

OregonLive August 26, 2012 “I wasn’t surprised the topic came up,” commented Rep. Suzanne Bonamici, D-Ore., about one major theme at a high-tech innovation forum in Portland last Tuesday. “I guess I was surprised it was such a prevalent part of the conversation.” In fact, for many of the entrepreneurs present at the forum, immigration […]

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Why States Should Grant DACA Beneficiaries Driver’s Licenses

In the early 2000s, one of the ways states attempted to control unauthorized immigration was by limiting immigrant eligibility for driver’s licenses and state-issued identification documents. The arguments for and against extending eligibility for driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants takes a new twist with the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program.  Because those who […]

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Why Kobach’s Lawsuit Against Deferred Action is Unlikely to Stand Up in Court

Kris Kobach’s official job title is Kansas Secretary of State. But he is better known for drafting—and being hired to defend in court—state and local immigration laws designed to make undocumented residents “self-deport.” His two most notorious undertakings are Arizona SB 1070 and Alabama HB 56, which have largely been eviscerated by federal courts. Yesterday, […]

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From Brain Drain To Brain Flow: The New Economy Of Innovation Turbulence

Eurasia Review August 23, 2012 At one time in the recent past, leaders in developing countries and in international organizations decried the “brain drain” that led the best and brightest in what we used to call the “third world” to emigrate to the West to take advantage of superior educational and employment opportunities. The United […]

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5 Ways DACA Renews the Conversation on Immigration Reform

There’s no doubt that recent implementation of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) initiative is the biggest thing to happen in immigration law in many years. While most of the attention is currently focused on how to make it work, how to apply and how to work out the kinks, it’s important to take […]

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Congress Must Reform Immigration Laws That Send Top STEM Graduates to China

Christian Science Monitor August 22, 2012 Jonas Korlach left Cornell with a Ph.D. in biochemistry, a patent on technology that effectively reads the entire human genome, and an idea that spawned a company now employing 285 people and generating more than $30 million in revenue per year. Yet because of American immigration laws, Dr. Jonas […]

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Immigration Law Curbs Foreign Student Entrepreneurship

Nearly everyone agrees that the U.S. immigration system should provide visas for entrepreneurs who want to start businesses in the U.S. and employ American workers.  However, convoluted immigration laws make it difficult for some entrepreneurs to launch their business while they’re in school and remain lawfully in the U.S. after they graduate in order to […]

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Liberalising immigration would double the world’s income overnight

New Statesman August 21, 2012 The Washington Post’s Dylan Matthews reports on a new paper from the (US) National Bureau of Economic Research (£), which examines what would happen if all immigration restrictions were dropped. Matthews summarises: [University of Wisconsin’s John Keenan] builds a model that assumes that in the absence of restrictions, people will […]

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