Center for Immigration Studies

Center for Immigration Studies

New Americans in San Antonio

New Americans in San Antonio

Report: New Americans in San Antonio Download the Report New research from New American Economy shows that immigrant households in San Antonio earned nearly $4.6 billion in 2017 and contributed more than $1 billion in taxes. The report, New Americans in San Antonio, was released… Read More

The Transcontinental Railroad at 150: The Contributions of Chinese Immigrants and Chinese Americans

The Transcontinental Railroad at 150: The Contributions of Chinese Immigrants and Chinese Americans

This week marks the 150th anniversary of the opening of the Transcontinental Railroad, the first continuous railroad line from California to the East Coast. The completion of the Railroad was transformative, shortening travel time between New York and San Francisco from up to six months to less… Read More

Indian Neurologist Leads Groundbreaking Alzheimer’s Research Institute in San Antonio

Indian Neurologist Leads Groundbreaking Alzheimer’s Research Institute in San Antonio

Sudha Seshadri wanted to be a doctor since childhood, when she watched her mother suffer from multiple sclerosis, a neurologic disorder that would kill her when Seshadri was a 19-year-old medical school student in southern India. After her father died the same year, Seshadri transferred to be closer to her… Read More

Mexican Immigrant Builds Her Way from Small Business to Presidential Appointments

Mexican Immigrant Builds Her Way from Small Business to Presidential Appointments

Patricia Stout long had the confidence to go her own way. Born in 1940s Mexico, she pursued business and math in school, took an airline job in the United States, married an American and, in 1974, moved to San Antonio. Although she felt isolated — “it was a different… Read More

The Role of Contact and Values in Public Attitudes Toward Unauthorized Immigrants

The Role of Contact and Values in Public Attitudes Toward Unauthorized Immigrants

This report uncovers the degree to which contact with immigrants and personal values are associated with views about unauthorized immigrants. Read More

The Guardian Opinion: I won a Pulitzer. Yet Trump wants to deport me because I'm undocumented

The Guardian Opinion: I won a Pulitzer. Yet Trump wants to deport me because I’m undocumented

In September 2017, I sat with my friends in a Ball State University library room trying to come to terms with the news that Donald Trump had just shut down the program that gives undocumented immigrants like me the legal right to work and live in the United States. My… Read More

The New York Times Opinion: I'm the child of immigrants. I'm not giving up on the Republican Party.

The New York Times Opinion: I’m the child of immigrants. I’m not giving up on the Republican Party.

I was drawn to the Republican Party because of my conservative principles — family-oriented, religious and socially conservative. But it has been difficult to reconcile my allegiance to the party with its devolving evermore into a mouthpiece for President Trump’s dangerous views and policies, especially with regard to immigration. This… Read More

Remembering Ellis Island's Busiest Day: How Has Immigration Changed Since 1907?

Remembering Ellis Island’s Busiest Day: How Has Immigration Changed Since 1907?

On April 17, 1907, thousands upon thousands of immigrants filed through Ellis Island’s Registry Room, a room no larger than two high school basketball courts. By the day’s end, they had set the record for the number of immigrants processed in a single day—11,747. By… Read More

Religion News Service Opinion: Four decades after Saigon fell, we still need refugees as much as they need us

Religion News Service Opinion: Four decades after Saigon fell, we still need refugees as much as they need us

The day Saigon fell, on April 30, 1975, my mother and her family knew they could not stay in their native Vietnam. They joined the tens of thousands of South Vietnamese civilians who had evacuated the country to avoid massacre by the communist Viet Cong, who had captured Saigon. As… Read More

Portland Press Herald Maine Voices: Reform bill would allow DACA recipients to give back to U.S.

Portland Press Herald Maine Voices: Reform bill would allow DACA recipients to give back to U.S.

Last month, when Democrats introduced legislation to protect young immigrants like me who were brought to the United States as children, I felt a huge wave of relief. Ever since President Trump announced the end of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program more than a year and a half… Read More

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