Center for Immigration Studies

Center for Immigration Studies

Mexican Family Starts Business and Contributes to San Mateo County

Mexican Family Starts Business and Contributes to San Mateo County

Marilu Bedolla-Jaimes In 2000, when four-year-old Marilu Bedolla-Jaimes relocated from Mexico to the Bay area, the only English word she knew was “doggy.” Her parents, who had come to America for better economic opportunities, were unsure of how to address their most basic needs, such as securing housing, a bank… Read More

Filipino Immigrant Family Finds Success in San Mateo County

Filipino Immigrant Family Finds Success in San Mateo County

Althea Avice de Guzman Althea Avice de Guzman grew up in the Philippines with her father and siblings. Shortly after she was born, her mother left the Philippines and emigrated to carve out a slice of the American Dream.  In Chicago, Althea’s mom worked odd jobs from gift-wrapping at the… Read More

Ethiopian Immigrant Couple Start Home-Care Business in Minnesota

Ethiopian Immigrant Couple Start Home-Care Business in Minnesota

Abraham & Aster Giorgis DaluOwners of A&A Reliable Home Health Care In the 1970s, Abe and Aster Giorgis Dalu attended the same high school in Ethiopia — then, a decade later, they reunited by chance in the United States, where they had both settled. Now married, the pair run A&A… Read More

South Asian Couple with Refugee Roots Starts Elder Care Service Business in Minnesota

South Asian Couple with Refugee Roots Starts Elder Care Service Business in Minnesota

Souk & Youa HerOwners of Elder Care Day Services Souk and Youa Her are high-school sweethearts who bonded over their families’ shared background as Hmong refugees: Souk was born in a refugee camp in Thailand, while Youa was born in America soon after her parents left a Laotian refugee… Read More

Bhutanese Refugee Becomes Serial Entrepreneur in Saint Paul

Bhutanese Refugee Becomes Serial Entrepreneur in Saint Paul

Tilak PokwalOwner of Groceries & Nepali Kitchen  When Tilak Pokwal was 14 years old, his Nepali family fled their home in Bhutan amidst a wave of ethnic cleansing. Tilak spent the next 18 years in a refugee camp in Nepal, leaving only to get a college education in Kathmandu,… Read More

Congolese Immigrant and Entrepreneur “Sews” Hope in Washtenaw County

Congolese Immigrant and Entrepreneur “Sews” Hope in Washtenaw County

Esperance MalongaOwner of U4Hope In 2011, at 34, Esperance Malonga was granted an American diversity visa. It was the fifth time she’d entered the lottery. “When I won, it felt like a dream come true,” said the Congolese native. “I’ve always wanted to raise a family and maybe even… Read More

New Americans in Washtenaw County

New Americans in Washtenaw County

In January 2022, NAE merged with the American Immigration Council to combine a broad suite of advocacy tools to better expand and protect the rights of immigrants, more fully ensure immigrants’ ability to succeed economically, and help make the communities they settle in more welcoming. Read More

Congolese Refugee Helps Others Plan for Their Future in Washtenaw County

Congolese Refugee Helps Others Plan for Their Future in Washtenaw County

Deborah NganduRelationship Banker In 2011 Deborah Ngandu accompanied her husband, Alain, from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the U.S., where he was pursuing his master’s degree in clinical research at Mayo Clinic Graduate School. They had planned to return home, but in 2012 everything changed. That year, Alain’s… Read More

Court Says Turnbacks of Tens of Thousands of Asylum Seekers Are Unlawful

Court Says Turnbacks of Tens of Thousands of Asylum Seekers Are Unlawful

A federal judge declared unlawful the U.S. government’s turnbacks of asylum seekers arriving at ports of entry along the U.S southern border. The court ruled that the United States is required by law to inspect and process asylum seekers when they present themselves at ports of entry, and condemned the practice of denying access to the asylum process through metering and similar practices. Read More

New Research Shows Immigrants in Miami-Dade County make up 61.5 percent of STEM, over 86 percent of agriculture, and more than 76 percent of manufacturing workers.

New Research Shows Immigrants in Miami-Dade County make up 61.5 percent of STEM, over 86 percent of agriculture, and more than 76 percent of manufacturing workers.

Immigrants make up over 73 percent of Miami-Dade’s business owners despite making up 54.7 percent of the county’s total population in 2019.    Miami, FL –   Miami-Dade County and The Office of New Americans (ONA) today released a new report by New American Economy, providing key details on how immigrants… Read More

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