Search results for: "90"

Filter

Second “Muslim Ban” Meets Renewed Litigation

In the week following President Trump’s issuance of a second travel ban targeting six Muslim-majority countries, several states and a number of immigrant rights groups immediately returned to federal courts throughout the country to urge that this ban, like the first, be enjoined. Trump’s initial Muslim travel ban, an Executive Order issued on January 27, […]

Read More

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 directly with some 1,000 students, from more than 90 […]

Read More

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 Berry, the executive vice president […]

Read More

Hutchinson Leader: New online tool maps economic impact of immigrants

Minnesota business leaders in mid-February showcased new research on the contributions of immigrants in Minnesota and highlighted the critical need for immigration reform. Spearheaded by New American Economy and the Minnesota Business Immigration Coalition, the report marks the launch of Map the Impact — a campaign to highlight the power of immigrants in communities across […]

Read More

Tucson Sentinel: Report: Immigrants living in Arizona contribute $21.4 billion to state’s economy

A New York group urging immigration reform has calculated that about 900,000  immigrants living in Arizona contribute at least  $21.4 billion to the state’s economy through purchases as well as taxes. The Partnership for a New American Economy, a bipartisan group headed by former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, calculated immigrant economic contributions in […]

Read More

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 1,500 border-patrol officers and today there are more than […]

Read More

President Trump to Replace Travel Ban Executive Order

President Trump re-issued his immigration executive order on Monday that halts all refugee admissions for at least 120 days and bans entry into the United States for nationals of six Muslim-majority countries. Those targeted by the previous version of the executive order are largely unchanged, except that Iraq was removed from the list of banned countries. […]

Read More

WE Global Network: How Immigrants Are Helping To Rebuild Rust Belt Economies

Welcoming immigrants and providing them an opportunity to build a life and contribute to the fabric of our society is one of America’s longest and proudest national traditions. But that central tenet of our national character is now being challenged by Donald Trump’s anti-immigration policies. As this national debate rages on, there’s a quieter current […]

Read More

These Changes May Keep Asylum Seekers From Getting Their Day in Court

Effective February 27, 2017, new changes to the asylum screening process could lead to an increased number of deportations of asylum-seekers who fear persecution upon return to their home country. On February 13, 2017, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) revised its Asylum Division Officer Training Course (ADOTC) lesson plans on how to assess an […]

Read More

Crain’s Chicago Business: My grandparents were immigrants

My maternal grandparents came to America in the early 1900s: Giuseppi Cimino and Fortunata Cardia, both right off the boat in New York and Baltimore from Cefalu, a lovely but economically challenged little town on the north coast of Sicily. Their life here wasn’t easy, not when terms like wop and dago were rife. But […]

Read More

Showing 751 - 760 of 1891

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg