Center for Immigration Studies

Center for Immigration Studies

Immigrant helps promote small business development in Middlesex County, NJ

Immigrant helps promote small business development in Middlesex County, NJ

Luis DeLaHoz was granted asylum and moved to the United States in 2004. By 2005, he was running his own-income tax preparation business in New Brunswick. He had a good education behind him. Raised in Manizales, in the coffee region of central Colombia, DeLaHoz had a bachelor’s degree in economics… Read More

From coding to coaching — an immigrant entrepreneur makes it his mission to help the next generation succeed

From coding to coaching — an immigrant entrepreneur makes it his mission to help the next generation succeed

Rashaad Bajwa arrived in the United States when he was 3 years old. Learning English was easy, given his age. And his parents, educated in British schools in Pakistan, spoke English at home. But he still lived the immigrant experience. “I still am,” he says. “Even though I grew up… Read More

Immigrant restaurateur gives back to the community through Lebanese cuisine

Immigrant restaurateur gives back to the community through Lebanese cuisine

Gus Sleiman’s family left their homeland in 1989 to escape the Lebanese Civil War, a 15-year conflict that killed an estimated 150,000 people and displaced another 900,000 — about one-fifth of the population. Sleiman was 16. The family moved to Michigan then New York and, while visiting a church in… Read More

New Americans in Middlesex County

New Americans in Middlesex County

New research from New American Economy shows that immigrants held $9.4 billion in spending power — 42.8 percent of the total spending power in the county — and contributed more than $4 billion in taxes in 2018. The report, New Americans in Middlesex County, was prepared in partnership with… Read More

Trial Challenging Unconstitutional Conditions in Customs and Border Protection's Facilities in Arizona Ends

Trial Challenging Unconstitutional Conditions in Customs and Border Protection’s Facilities in Arizona Ends

During the course of the trial, a federal judge heard from qualified experts who testified on the inadequate medical care and severe conditions inside CBP detention centers. Read More

Economic Cost of Kentucky Senate Bill 1

Economic Cost of Kentucky Senate Bill 1

Kentucky State Senator Danny Carroll recently introduced Senate Bill 1, which has been identified as a top priority for the chamber in 2020. The bill, which would effectively force local law enforcement agents to become federal immigration agents, would also punish local government entities and public colleges and universities that… Read More

Immigration Groups Challenge Inhumane Conditions Inside U.S. Border Patrol Detention Facilities in Court

Immigration Groups Challenge Inhumane Conditions Inside U.S. Border Patrol Detention Facilities in Court

The trial in a legal challenge to the horrific conditions in U.S. Border Patrol's short-term detention facilities across the Tucson sector, filed in June 2015 by immigration groups, begins on Monday, Jan. 13 at the U.S. District Court in Tucson, Arizona. Read More

Immigration Detention in the United States by Agency

Immigration Detention in the United States by Agency

This fact sheet describes the populations, duration, and conditions for noncitizens detained in the United States by department. Read More

The Economic Costs for U.S. States Who Opt Out of Refugee Resettlement

The Economic Costs for U.S. States Who Opt Out of Refugee Resettlement

In late September, the Trump Administration issued an executive order that requires state and local governments to give written consent to accept refugees. If a state or a locality fails to submit such consent before January 21, agencies will be unable to resettle refugees in those jurisdictions. Read More

Asylum Seekers Ask Court for Protection from Latest Trump Effort to Eviscerate America’s Asylum System

Asylum Seekers Ask Court for Protection from Latest Trump Effort to Eviscerate America’s Asylum System

Immigrant rights attorneys filed an emergency motion to block the government from applying another Trump administration rule to asylum seekers forced by a government policy known as “metering” to wait in Mexico to access the U.S. asylum process. The rule — the latest of the administration’s numerous attempts to eviscerate America’s asylum system — sends asylum seekers to third countries, including Guatemala, Honduras, and El Salvador, to seek protection and would deny those previously subject to the government’s metering policy the opportunity to seek asylum in the United States. Read More

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