Center for Immigration Studies

Center for Immigration Studies

“Talent Does Not Have a Zip Code” Says Mobile Advocacy App Founder

“Talent Does Not Have a Zip Code” Says Mobile Advocacy App Founder

When Ximena Hartsock first began looking for a solution to the lack of digital grassroots tools for advocacy in late 2012, she quickly learned she was up against some major obstacles. She was a Latina woman, with no entrepreneurial or tech experience, in a room full of skeptics. Hartsock was… Read More

From Experience, Doctoral Student Knows More Immigrants Would Love the Chance to Study, Work, Pay Taxes

From Experience, Doctoral Student Knows More Immigrants Would Love the Chance to Study, Work, Pay Taxes

When Mariana Ocampo was growing up in Texas, she and her siblings longed for part-time jobs similar to the ones their teenage friends held. They wanted to work, they wanted to spend their earnings, and they wanted to contribute to their family. But since Ocampo and her siblings… Read More

First-Generation American Chef Says the Restaurant Industry Depends on Immigrants

First-Generation American Chef Says the Restaurant Industry Depends on Immigrants

Chef James Montejano has worked in some of the best restaurants in San Francisco and San Diego and knows that their success depends on talented trained kitchen staff performing daily miracles. Yet as the restaurant business continues to boom, chefs and restaurant owners are scrambling to find and retain the… Read More

A Former Undocumented Immigrant is Behind One of Kansas City's Most Popular Youth Soccer Facilities

A Former Undocumented Immigrant is Behind One of Kansas City’s Most Popular Youth Soccer Facilities

Raul Villegas had been living in America as an undocumented immigrant for more than 20 years when he decided to build an indoor soccer facility in Kansas City, Kansas. That was in 2013, long before the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, or DACA, removed the threat of deportation for… Read More

College Director Has the Answer to Firms’ Worker Shortages: Let Undocumented Immigrants Go To School

College Director Has the Answer to Firms’ Worker Shortages: Let Undocumented Immigrants Go To School

When Julio Hernandez was growing up around gangs in San Antonio, his parents made it clear that college would be in his future. His peers seemed surprised. One even teased him: “How can you go to college? You rich or something?” As the son of Mexican immigrants who worked… Read More

Immigrants Mean Strong Economy and Tax Base, Says Leader of Alabama Nonprofit

Immigrants Mean Strong Economy and Tax Base, Says Leader of Alabama Nonprofit

Isabel Rubio, a second-generation Mexican American and executive director of the Hispanic Interest Coalition of Alabama (HICA), believes that when we give all Americans – immigrants or otherwise – equal opportunities, the entire country benefits. “Forget what side of the immigration line you’re on, this is an economic issue,” says… Read More

Miss Michigan 2016 Just Happens to Be an Automotive Designer--and a Chinese Immigrant

Miss Michigan 2016 Just Happens to Be an Automotive Designer–and a Chinese Immigrant

This summer, Arianna Quan was crowned Miss Michigan — but the 23-year-old, who aspires to be an automobile designer and is paying for her studies with the tens of thousands of dollars she’s won from competing with the Miss America Organization, didn’t have a typical “Toddlers & Tiaras” upbringing. Quan,… Read More

Without Immigrants ‘Almost Every Service Industry Would Collapse,’ Says Former Cop and Community Leader

Without Immigrants ‘Almost Every Service Industry Would Collapse,’ Says Former Cop and Community Leader

Hector Flores, National Immigration Committee Chair for the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), was raised by his Mexican-American grandparents in South Texas. He spent summers doing migrant work, traveling north to Indiana to pick cherries then south to West Texas to tend to the cotton crop. When he’d… Read More

Many of America’s Best Ideas Have Come From New Americans, Says Immigration Historian

Many of America’s Best Ideas Have Come From New Americans, Says Immigration Historian

Dr. Shannon Anderson, associate professor of sociology at Roanoke College and author of Immigration, Assimilation, and the Cultural Construction of American National Identity, first became interested in immigration while pursuing her PhD at the University of Virginia. She researched the impact that the perception of immigrants had on the nation. Read More

After Coming as a Cuban Refugee, This Entrepreneur Built a $50 Million Business

After Coming as a Cuban Refugee, This Entrepreneur Built a $50 Million Business

When the dot-com bubble burst in 2001, Cuban-born entrepreneur José Prendes watched the ensuing chaos carefully. He was trying to determine which e-businesses would survive and why. One that continued advertising with television commercials, he noticed, was 1-800-Pet-Meds. “I thought that it had to be a good business, since amid… Read More

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