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Title: Immigration Overview


1
Immigration Overview
  • Rogelio Saenz
  • Texas AM University
  • rsaenz_at_tamu.edu

2
Introduction
  • The U.S. has long been a country of immigrants
  • Waves of immigration associated with flows from
    different parts of the world
  • Movement of capital and products across
    international borders
  • NAFTA
  • Movement of people across international borders

3
Globalization
  • Globalization is a process by which money, labor,
    goods, and services move easily across
    international boundaries. Globalization requires
    that goods and services be produced where costs
    are lowest, and then sold wherever profits are
    highest. Capitalists and workers alike should be
    free to produce a product (or increase the value
    of their labor) wherever they can. They should
    then be free to sell this product (or their
    labor) where it can bring them the greatest
    profit. NAFTA allows the free movement of goods
    and capital, but obstructs the free movement of
    labor. This deviation helps create the problem of
    undocumented immigration.
  • Source Chad Richardson, University of Texas at
    Pan American.

4
Nationalism
  • Nationalism is an ideology which holds that
    individuals owe loyalty to their nation and that
    each nation should give preference to its
    citizens. Nationalism promotes a strong sense of
    belonging based on a shared national culture,
    glorifying myths, core values, and a common
    identity. It is a glue that holds a people
    together. But it also inspires many to act out
    against outsiders, or those considered
    different. Today we see nationalism used to
    attack illegal aliens and to argue that
    immigrants are ruining our way of life
    (American culture).
  • Source Chad Richardson, University of Texas at
    Pan American

5
Increasing Globalization and Nationalism
  • Globalization is dramatically increasing. Free
    trade creates major market changes. To stay
    competitive, employers seek for ever cheaper
    labor. This leads them to take jobs overseas or
    to draw immigrants to the U.S. While some U.S.
    jobs are eliminated (or replaced by immigrant
    labor), new jobs are created at increasingly
    higher levels of skill and education.
  • Nationalism is also increasing. The changes
    brought by globalization (job loss and new waves
    of immigrant labor) lead to fears and resentment
    against outsiders. These fears are being
    exploited by politicians and media outlets who
    promote immigrant bashing and alarmist
    legislation.
  • Source Chad Richardson, University of Texas at
    Pan American

6
The Current Environment
  • Militarization of the Border
  • Walls and Fences
  • Worksite Raids
  • Detentions and Deportations
  • Hate and Violence

7
  • Source http//www.afa.org/magazine/Dec2006/theate
    r04.jpg

8
  • Source http//farm1.static.flickr.com/167/4146850
    19_30c6abeb79.jpg

9
  • Source
  • http//bp1.blogger.com/_t5CFZhL40BE/R8BQUUHu1dI/AA
    AAAAAAAqY/fKVyT5i7YiI/s1600-h/US_Mexican_Border_Wa
    ll2Bconstruction2B(web).jpg

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  • Source http//i.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2008/images/04
    /24/gall.texmex.gi.jpg

11
  • Source http//cache.daylife.com/imageserve/01Ny0h
    Y1FL9jK/610x.jpg

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  • Source
  • http//fairimmigration.files.wordpress.com/2008/06
    /242_cartoon_border_fence_hurwitt_large.gif

13
Source http//pewhispanic.org/files/reports/84.pd
f
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Source http//pewhispanic.org/files/reports/84.pd
f
15
ICE Raid Litigations
  • 2007
  • http//www.nilc.org/DC_Conf/dc-conf2007/wrkshp_mat
    erials/2-5_ICEraidslitigation2007.JPG
  • 2006-2007
  • http//www.nilc.org/DC_Conf/dc-conf2007/wrkshp_mat
    erials/2-5_USraidmap_2006-10-22.JPG

16
  • Source http//static.flickr.com/143/321540194_a54
    5dd69f6_o.jpg

17
  • Source http//farm4.static.flickr.com/3276/254698
    9172_2c46dfe848_m.jpg

18
  • Source http//www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dw
    s/img/12-06/1213cactushp.jpg

19
  • Source http//farm3.static.flickr.com/2368/251669
    1728_c078399551_m.jpg

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The T. Don Hutto Family Detention Center
Source http//subtopia.blogspot.com/2007/02/circu
s-of-detention.html
22
Hutto Family Detention Center in Taylor, Texas
(Photo by Jay Johnson-Castro)
  • Source http//latinalista.blogspot.com/2006/12/pr
    ivatized-immigrant-detention.html

23
  • Source http//www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,253699
    ,00.html

24
Source http//pewhispanic.org/files/reports/84.pd
f
25
Southern Poverty Law Center
  • 14 Hate Groups Against Immigrants
  • http//www.splcenter.org/intel/map/type.jsp?DT27

26
  • Origen http//news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_
    article.html?article_idcb1ac6666cf80f87fd61e4cec5
    421342

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Inmigrante Mexicano Golpeado a Muerte en
Pennsylvania
  • Source
  • http//americanhumanity.wordpress.com/2008/07/19/m
    exican-immigrant-beaten-to-death-in-pennsylvania/

29
Effects of Globalization vs. Nationalism on the
US-Mexico Borderlands Source Chad Richardson
Globalization
Nationalism
Borderlands
30
Maximizing the Goodand Minimizing the Pain of
this Conflict
  • Globalization produces both winners and losers
  • Globalization pushes Mexican workers off ejidos
    and pulls them to the U.S. where they can earn
    money for their families
  • Globalization takes away some U.S. jobs. But many
    jobs are also created for those with the needed
    education skills.
  • Immigration also produces winners and losers
  • Though some workers are displaced by immigrants,
    evidence strongly suggests that they create more
    jobs than they displace
  • Immigrants can also keep many U.S. industries
    competitive and keep some companies from taking
    jobs outside the U.S.
  • Source Chad Richardson, University of Texas at
    Pan American.

31
  • Current Trends

32
  • Jeffrey S. Passel and DVera Cohn. Trends in
    Unauthorized Immigration Undocumented Inflow Now
    Trails Legal Inflow. Washington, DC Pew Hispanic
    Center, October 2008.
  • http//pewhispanic.org/files/reports/94.pdf

33
Estimates of the Undocumented Immigrant
Population in the U.S., 2000-2008
34
Key Trends
  • Decline in the undocumented population since 2007
  • The 2005-2008 period has seen the slowest growth
    in the undocumented population during the decade
  • Average of 800,000/yr. in 2000-2004
  • Average of 500,000/yr. in 2005-2008
  • In 2005-2008, legal permanent residents outnumber
    undocumented immigrants, a reversal of a trend
    that started a decade ago
  • Still, undocumented immigrant population has
    increased more than 40 since 2000
  • Undocumented immigrants account for 4 of total
    U.S. population

35
Possible Reasons for Changes
  • Slowdown in U.S. economy
  • Stabilization of Mexican and Latin American
    economies
  • Heightened enforcement and security of the border
    and beyond

36
Percentage Distribution of U.S. Undocumented
Immigrant Population by Region and Country of
Birth, 2008Source Pew Hispanic Center estimates
based on March supplements of Current Population
Survey.
37
Other Key Findings
  • Undocumented immigrants account for 30 of
    nations foreign-born population of more than 39
    million.
  • 2 of every 5 undocumented immigrants have arrived
    since 2000
  • 4 of 5 undocumented from Latin America (9.6
    million with 7 million coming from Mexico alone)

38
  • Rakesh Kochhar. Sharp Decline in Income for
    Non-Citizen Immigrant Households, 2006-2007.
    Washington, DC Pew Hispanic Center, October
    2008.
  • http//pewhispanic.org/files/reports/95.pdf

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42
  • Mark Hugo Lopez and Susan Minushkin. Hispanics
    See Their Situation in U.S. Deteriorating Oppose
    Key Immigration Enforcement Measures.
    Washington, DC Pew Hispanic Center, September
    2008.
  • http//pewhispanic.org/files/reports/93.pdf

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46
  • Workplace Raids
  • High-profile workplace raids to detain
    immigrants who are working without authorization
    have become more common in recent years (Bazar
    2008). Some of the largest raids this year
    include that of Pilgrims Pride in which over 300
    immigrants were detained in five states,
    AgriProcessors in Postville, Iowa, where more
    than 300 immigrants were detained, and Howard
    Industries of Laurel, Miss. in which nearly 600
    were detained.
  • Source Lopez and Minushkin (2008).

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48
  • Prosecuting Employers
  • Employment-based immigration violations involve
    two parties, the employee who is not authorized
    to work in the United States and the employer who
    is not permitted to hire undocumented workers.
    The federal government has stepped up its actions
    against employers in recent years (Pew Hispanic
    Center 2007). Some recent enforcement actions
    couple workplace raids with the criminal
    prosecution of employers who are alleged to have
    knowingly hired undocumented immigrants. Among
    the high-profile actions of this sort are the
    filing of charges this year against the owners
    and managers of AgriProcessors, a meatpacker
    based in Postville, Iowa, and in 2006 against the
    managers of IFCO Systems, a wood pallet maker
    with corporate headquarters in Houston.
  • Source Lopez and Minushkin (2008).

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  • A Demographic Profile of Latinos in the South
    (Excluding Texas) from the 2007 American
    Community Survey

60
Age-Sex Pyramid of the Latino Population in the
South, 2007
61
Age-Sex Pyramid of the White Population in the
South, 2007
62
Age-Sex Pyramid of the Black Population in the
South, 2007
63
Percentage of Population Foreign-Born in the
South by Race, 2007
  • Latinos 51.6
  • Whites 2.6
  • Blacks 5.6

64
Occupations Where Higher Percentages of
Foreign-Born Latinos Work Compared to Other
Selected Groups, 2007
  • FB NB
  • Occupation Latino Latino White Black
  • __________________________________________________
    __
  • Food Preparation Service 7.8 7.3
    5.3 7.6
  • Bldg. Grounds Cleaning Maint. 11.7
    4.5 3.1 6.3
  • Farming, Fisheries, and Forestry 3.4
    0.7 0.6 0.5
  • Construction 21.2 6.7 6.4
    4.7
  • Production 10.0 5.1 6.0
    8.5
  • __________________________________________________
    ________

65
  • State Variations in the Foreign-Born Latino
    Population in the South
  • (Excluding Delaware, District of Columbia,
    Maryland, Oklahoma, Texas, Virginia, and West
    Virginia)

66
Percentage of Latinos Who are Foreign-Born in
Selected States in the South, 2007
67
Sex Ratios for Foreign-Born Latinos in Selected
States in the South, 2007
68
Median Year in Which Foreign-Born Latinos
Immigrated to the U.S. in Selected States in the
South, 2007
69
Percentage of Foreign-Born Latinos Who Speak Only
Spanish in Selected States in the South, 2007
70
Median Hourly Wages of Foreign-Born Latino Males
in Selected States in the South, 2006
71
Percentage of Foreign-Born Latinos in Poverty in
Selected States in the South, 2006
72
  • Combating Some Common Misperceptions in the
    Anti-Immigrant Backlash
  • Source Chad Richardson, University of Texas at
    Pan American

73
Misconception 1 They Only want welfare and we
simply cant afford it.
  • Francisco Rivera-Batiz Survey research showed
    that most undocumented workers do not come here
    seeking welfare payments, health care, or other
    government handouts. They come to work to earn
    money that they can then use to supplement their
    meager incomes in Mexico. Journal of
    International Affairs 53, no. 2 (Spring 2000)
    485-501
  • A University of Illinois at Chicago study of
    1,653 documented and undocumented immigrants in
    metro Chicago found that only a very small number
    of them were receiving government benefits.
    Conclusion Undocumented immigrants support
    thousands of other workers in the local economy,
    pay taxes, and demonstrate little reliance on
    government benefits. Center for Urban Economic
    Development at the University of Illinois at
    Chicago, Chicago's Undocumented Immigrants
    (2002) iv
  • At the national level, almost no evidence
    indicates that immigrants impose net burdens on
    taxpayers at the federal level. In fact,
    Espenshade shows that immigrants provide a
    substantial fiscal surplus (e.g., 30 Billion
    surplus account of the Social Security
    Administration. Thomas J. Espenshade,
    Unauthorized immigration to the United States,
    Annual Review of Sociology, 21, (1995) 195

74
A Look at Public Expenditures for the
Undocumented in Texas
  • Comptroller of Public Accounts in Texas, 2005
  • The Comptrollers office estimates the absence of
    the estimated 1.4 million undocumented immigrants
    in Texas in fiscal 2005 would have been a loss to
    our Gross State Product of 17.7 billion.
  • Also, the Comptrollers office estimates that
    state revenues collected from undocumented
    immigrants exceed what the state spent on
    services, with the difference being 424.7
    million.
  • The Comptroller estimates that undocumented
    immigrants paid more than 513 million in fiscal
    2005 in local taxes, including city, county and
    special district sales and property taxes.
  • While state revenues exceed state expenditures
    for undocumented immigrants, local governments
    and hospitals experience the opposite, with
    outlays exceeding tax revenues in 2005.
  • Source www.window.state.tx.us/specialrpt/undocume
    nted/

75
Misconception 2 They Commit More Crimes
  • Rebecca Clark and Scott Anderson found that
    almost half (47 percent) of illegal alien federal
    prisoners are in prison for an offense that only
    applies to them (unlawfully entering the United
    States). This crime is generally seen as an
    administrative, not a criminal, violation.

Source Rebecca L. Clark and Scott A. Anderson,
Urban Institute, (June 30, 2000) 3
76
Crime by Aliens in Texas
  • Only 7.5 of TDCJ inmates are foreign born
    (11,514 out of 151,852), though foreign born are
    estimated to be 14 of total Texas population.

Source Undocumented Immigrants in Texas,
December 2006. Susan Combs, Texas Comptroller of
Public Accounts. Section V. Incarceration
http//www.window.state.tx.us/specialrpt/undocumen
ted/5incarceration.html
77
Misconception 3 They steal our jobs
  • An extensive body of research shows that while
    the undocumented do take some jobs desired by
    U.S. workers, they also create many jobs.
  • A University of Illinois at Chicago study, for
    example, found that undocumented workers spend
    almost 3 billion a year in the Chicago region as
    consumers, which provides jobs to those who
    provide these goods or services.
  • The contribution of all Latino immigrants, of
    course, is much greater. In 2004 the
    Inter-American Development Bank, based on survey
    and census data, reported that Latin American
    immigrants (legal and undocumented) in 2004
    contributed an estimated 450 billion to the U.S.
    economy, often doing jobs spurned by others.
  • Center for Urban Economic Development at the
    University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago's
    Undocumented Immigrants ?An Analysis of Wages,
    Working Conditions, and Economic Contributions,
    (2002) iv

78
Conclusions
  • Immigration from Latin American to the U.S. has a
    long history, particularly in the case of Mexico
  • NAFTA solidified the interdependent relationship
    between Mexico and the U.S.
  • Human migration is part of the forces of
    globalization
  • Rise of nationalism and its negative impact on
    Latino immigrants and native-born alike
  • Mexico, Latin America, and the U.S. have gained
    from immigration
  • Latino immigrants represent a net benefit for the
    U.S.
  • Investment in Latino immigrants reaps even more
    benefits
  • The Dalton, Georgia story

79
  • El Fin
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