Center for Immigration Studies

Center for Immigration Studies

Afghan Immigrant Studies to Become a Professor While Serving Her Community Along the Way

Afghan Immigrant Studies to Become a Professor While Serving Her Community Along the Way

When 12-year-old Sophia Aimen Sexton lived in Pakistan as a refugee after fleeing Afghanistan during the Soviet-Afghan War, she watched a lot of Clint Eastwood movies. “I thought when we arrived in America, they would give me a horse and I’d be a cowgirl in the desert,” recalls Sexton. The reality was much different. In 1983, when Sexton’s family was resettled… Read More

Economist Escapes Ethiopia to Start Own Business in the U.S.

Economist Escapes Ethiopia to Start Own Business in the U.S.

In his native Ethiopia, where he’d earned an economics degree and held a government job calculating GDP statistics, Mahfuz Mummed faced a quandary. He’d given eight years of loyal service when his bosses began pressuring his department to falsify data. Mummed watched as colleagues who protested faced violent reprisals. “I… Read More

Ethiopian Immigrant Fulfills Her Dream of Owning a Business

Ethiopian Immigrant Fulfills Her Dream of Owning a Business

Rhoda Worku was a college student in Ethiopia when civil war broke out. Her father, a high-ranking member of the government, was executed and her mother was imprisoned. Eventually, Worku’s mother was released but life barely improved. “We didn’t have anything,” Worku says. “The government took everything from us.” In… Read More

Bolivian Immigrant Proud to Serve His New Country’s Air Force

Bolivian Immigrant Proud to Serve His New Country’s Air Force

Growing up in La Paz, Bolivia, Fernando Torrez was fascinated with American super hero cartoons. In 1996, when he was 12, his parents brought him and his older sister to Colorado in search of the American dream. There, he encountered real-life American heroes: cadets at the U.S. Air Force Academy. Read More

American Immigration Council's Statement on the Trump Administration's Failure to Reunite Separated Families

American Immigration Council’s Statement on the Trump Administration’s Failure to Reunite Separated Families

"The government’s failure to comply with the court order to reunify the thousands of separated children and parents confirms the administration’s utter disregard for the humane and fair treatment of families coming to our country in search of protection." Read More

Foreign-Born Residents Contributed $220 Million to Missoula Region GDP in 2016

Foreign-Born Residents Contributed $220 Million to Missoula Region GDP in 2016

MISSOULA, MT – Immigrants in the Missoula region contributed $219.9 million to the region’s GDP in 2016 and paid $19.3 million in federal taxes and $7 million in state and local taxes, according to a new report by New American Economy (NAE), in partnership with the International Rescue Committee (IRC)… Read More

Liberian Immigrant Serves Montana by Becoming Mayor of Its Capitol

Liberian Immigrant Serves Montana by Becoming Mayor of Its Capitol

Wilmot Collins knew nothing about cold weather. A Liberian, he had spent his life in sub-Saharan Africa. Now, at age 30, he was escaping civil war and moving to Montana, where his wife had spent a year during high school. So when a relative gave him two pairs of long… Read More

Filipino Immigrant Trains Lawyers to the Benefit of Montanans

Filipino Immigrant Trains Lawyers to the Benefit of Montanans

Eduardo Capulong’s father, a prominent politician in the Philippines, had already endured one imprisonment when the family found their house ransacked by police and military forces one October evening. It was 1979, seven years after Ferdinand Marcos—notorious for torturing and killing his opponents—had imposed a martial-law dictatorship. “We fled here,”… Read More

Immigrant and Community Leader from Chile Paves the Way on Local Immigration Policy

Immigrant and Community Leader from Chile Paves the Way on Local Immigration Policy

Mirtha Becerra was born at the dawn of the Pinochet regime in Chile. When she was 11 years old, in the mid 1980s, her father, an architect, found himself unable to provide a good life for his family under the brutal dictatorship of General Augusto Pinochet Ugarte and took a… Read More

Immigration Courts Are Rolling out an Electronic Filing Pilot Program in July

Immigration Courts Are Rolling out an Electronic Filing Pilot Program in July

The immigration court system will begin to roll out an electronic filing pilot program in six immigration courts on July 16 this year, representing an important advancement for these courts that still heavily rely on paper documentation. Currently, immigration courts generally do not permit any electronic filing. Instead, immigrants… Read More

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