Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Why do we need an Immigration Beat?

Media and research sectors have become increasingly focused on immigrant-heritage youth over the past few decades. However, in recent years the content and tone of the their respective dialogues has never been further apart.

In mass media, discussion of immigration and immigrants has largely become a discussion of illegal immigration and illegal immigrants. Border control, detainment and deportation are major themes and children of immigrants appear temporary, problematic and, many times, irrelevant when viewed through this lens

However, children of immigrants are the fastest growing segment of the American youth population. Considering that nearly a fourth of all children in the US are children of immigrants their relevance to the future political, social and economic climate of the US is hardly debatable. This has sparked researchers to propose and investigate several central questions:
  • How are immigrant-heritage youth faring in US schools and communities?
  • What are the factors that affect these outcomes and what are the best environments for these children to become successfully integrated and engaged?
  • How do country of origin, immigrant generation, and level of acculturation factor into later outcomes?
Research around these themes has gained tremendous momentum with new articles and reports coming out monthly from universities, policy and research institutes across the country. But visibility has remained extremely low and more importantly impact on the public discussion negligible. This blog will be a sounding board for new findings, media perspectives on local and national scales, providing a new immigration beat.

2 comments:

  1. Send them home! We can't afford this nonsense! Boston Globe article in 1985, Clababell Ventura, here from San Juan. She figured the welfare system out and as of 1985 cost the tax payer over one milion dollars a year, undesputable, fact, whole family on the system.

    We had better start looking out for oursleves for a change. Just look at France, England, Germany and other European countys for an example. We have to stop being "PC" and call a spade a spade.

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  2. I'm on the side of the fence that says I'm glad someone is paying attention to the immigrants to our country, especially the children. They get caught in the midst of idological/political issues while they are trying hard to learn a new language, live in a new culture, eat new kinds of foods, go to school to better themselves, and (Congress willing) attain full citizenship so they can contribute something back.

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