Toolkit

Immigrant Integration Toolkit: Section 18: Recommended Readings

Year: 
2006
Month: 
September
Publisher: 
GCIR
Description: 

History of U.S. Immigration

The history of U.S. immigration reflects the social, economic, and political climate of the time. It also illustrates the nation's ongoing ambivalence about immigration, as well as offers insights on the role of race, prejudice, fear, and nativism in shaping U.S. immigration policy. The facts tell the story best.*

Language Acquisition

English acquisition rates are high among immigrants who come to the United States as children and rise across the generations.[source]

  • Almost 80 percent of first-generation (foreign-born) children from Mexico and 88 percent from China speak English "well" or "very well."
  • Among the second generation, 92 percent of Latinos and 96 percent of Asians are English proficient and many are bilingual in their mother tongue (85 percent of second-generation Latinos and 61 percent of second-generation Asians).
  • By the third generation, 72 percent of Latinos and 92 percent of Asians speak English only.

Immigrant Children and Education

Children of immigrants are one in five school-age children.[source]

  • From 1970 to 2000, children of immigrants increased from 6 percent to 19 percent of all school-age children, constituting 11 million of 58 million total U.S. children. About 75 percent of the children of immigrants are U.S. citizens.
  • In 2000, 16 percent of all students in pre-kindergarten were children of immigrants, but only 2 percent were foreign-born. In the upper grades (6 to 12), children of immigrants were 19 percent of the total student population, while the foreign-born were 7 percent of the total.

Immigrants in the U.S. Economy

Immigration Policy Center

The Immigration Policy Center released fact sheets highlighting the role and impact of immigrant, Latino, and Asian populations on the U.S. economy for each of the 50 states and for the nation. In 2008, immigrants comprised 12.5% of the U.S. population, about 36% of which were naturalized U.S. citizens and 30% were Legal Permanent Residents. The data also find that immigrants are an integral component of the work force and are a growing portion of the electorate.

The fact sheets are available from the Immigration Policy Center website.

The information below is from GCIR's Immigrant Integration Toolkit which includes general facts about immigrants in the U.S. economy supported by historical empirical data and developing trends in the economy.

Immigrants are a significant, increasing percentage of the U.S. labor force growth.[source]

  • Immigrants constituted more than 50 percent of the overall growth in the labor force in the last decade.
  • Between 1994 and 2004, the native-born labor force grew by 7 percent (118 million to 126 million), while the immigrant labor force grew by 66 percent (12.9 million to 21.4 million).
  • Between 2000 and 2050, new immigrants and their children will account for 83 percent of the growth in the working-age population and 60 percent of total U.S. population growth.

Patterns of Immigration Status

Immigrants with legal status make up 70 percent of the U.S. foreign-born population.[source]

Demographers estimate that in 2005:[source]

  • Legal permanent residents were 32 percent of the foreign-born (11.8 million, including 1.3 million who arrived as refugees).
  • Naturalized citizens were 35 percent (12.8 million, including 1.3 million who arrived as refugees).
  • Temporary legal residents (such as students and temporary workers) were 3 percent (1.3 million).
  • Unauthorized migrants were 30 percent (11.1 million).

U.S. Immigration Statistics

Immigrant numbers and growth rates are significant.[source]

  • The foreign-born population in the United States tripled in the past four decades and currently totals about 37 million, or nearly 12 percent of the total population.
  • By 2010, the foreign-born population is expected to increase to 43 million, or 13.5 percent of the total population.

Immigrant Integration Toolkit: Section 17: Glossary of Terms

Year: 
2006
Month: 
September
Publisher: 
GCIR
Description: 

This section from GCIR's Investing in Our Communities: Strategies for Immigrant Integration provides a brief explanation of major immigration and immigrant integration terms utilized in this report and in the field.

Immigrant Integration Toolkit: Section 16: Fast Facts

Year: 
2006
Month: 
September
Publisher: 
GCIR
Description: 

This section from GCIR's Investing in Our Communities: Strategies for Immigrant Integration offers comprehensive data about immigrants on several topics, including demographics, education, barriers to health care, and immigrants' impact on the U.S. economy.

Immigrant Integration Toolkit: Section 15: History of U.S. Immigration Law and Policy

Year: 
2006
Month: 
September
Publisher: 
GCIR
Description: 

This section from GCIR's Investing in Our Communities: Strategies for Immigrant Integration provides a quick overview of U.S. immigration law and policy from the 1700s to May 2006.

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