Center for Immigration Studies

Center for Immigration Studies

King 5 News: “Map shows economic impacts of immigrants in Washington”

King 5 News: “Map shows economic impacts of immigrants in Washington”

As President Donald Trump enacts stricter immigration policies, a group of business and political leaders are highlighting how immigrants fit into the U.S. economy. New American Economy, a coalition of companies and elected officials, mapped out the numbers, showing how many immigrants live in each state, how much they pay… Read More

An Immigrant Helps Entrepreneurs, They Help the Economy

An Immigrant Helps Entrepreneurs, They Help the Economy

For Karla Boldery, a Mexican immigrant and business coach, how to make business development easier for immigrants is the million-dollar question. How to improve immigration reform, she says, is “the twenty-million-dollar question.” For the past seven years, Boldery has worked in innovation and technology business development. She received a… Read More

University Advisor Fears Effect on U.S. Students as Foreign Applications Drop

University Advisor Fears Effect on U.S. Students as Foreign Applications Drop

Alpona Stamboldjiev, an Indian native who advises engineering students at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville, fears that some of the school’s most promising graduates won’t invest their skills in the United States economy.  “We have a very large population of international students, especially in engineering,” she says. “Now, because of the… Read More

Ohio’s Largest Industry Depends on Migrant Labor, Says Farmer

Ohio’s Largest Industry Depends on Migrant Labor, Says Farmer

For the last 10 years, Ohio farmer Tom Witten has relied on temporary workers from El Salvador to farm the 290 acres of sweet corn, tomatoes, and other labor-intensive crops that account for a substantial part of his business. He says the visa application process for these workers is expensive… Read More

‘We’re Working, Staying out of Trouble,’ Says DACA Recipient

‘We’re Working, Staying out of Trouble,’ Says DACA Recipient

When Radi finished high school, she longed to go to college. But as an undocumented immigrant, she didn’t have the same opportunities as her friends, and for years she waited tables at a local restaurant. Things finally changed with the implementation of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), a 2012… Read More

An Indian in Kansas Brings Hundreds of Jobs and Free Healthcare

An Indian in Kansas Brings Hundreds of Jobs and Free Healthcare

Abdul Arif grew up in a middle-class family in Hyderabad, India, and came to Wichita, Kansas, at 17 to join his brother, who was a naturalized citizen. He’d hoped to get an education in America, but things didn’t go as planned: Arif dropped out of high school, got married, and… Read More

Politicians, Not People, Divide Us, Says Lebanese-American Dentist

Politicians, Not People, Divide Us, Says Lebanese-American Dentist

When Omar Mahmassani arrived in the United States from Lebanon to begin studying dentistry at Georgetown University, he felt positively awed. “I felt so lucky,” he says of that day in 1984. “A degree from the United States is the gold standard. People look up to the United States as… Read More

A St. Patrick's Day Toast to Influential Irish-Americans

A St. Patrick’s Day Toast to Influential Irish-Americans

St. Patrick’s Day began as a religious feast for the patron saint of Ireland and has since grown into a global celebration of the vibrant country and its people. In the 2010 U.S. Census, 34.7 million residents of the United States claimed Irish ancestry, which is seven times Ireland’s current population. Read More

Louisiana Lawyer: For Sake of Economy, ‘Make Immigration Viable Again’

Louisiana Lawyer: For Sake of Economy, ‘Make Immigration Viable Again’

When Baton Rouge was devastated by flooding in 2016, it was immigrants who came to the rescue. “There was no way that Baton Rouge and the surrounding areas could rebuild without immigrant labor, whether documented or undocumented,” says Paul “Woody” Scott, a Honduran-American immigration lawyer who has worked in the… Read More

Syrian-Born Doctor a Lifeline in Rural Kentucky

Syrian-Born Doctor a Lifeline in Rural Kentucky

When Dr. Firas Koura, a Syrian immigrant and president of the Kentucky Lung Clinic, looks at his fellow colleagues, one thought occurs: “Most of the patients depend on foreigners for specialized treatments, and many for primary care. Without immigrants, there would be no pulmonologist, no cardiologist, and no nephrologist in… Read More

Make a contribution

Make a direct impact on the lives of immigrants.

logoimg