For the last decade, the American political, economic, and educational landscape has weathered a destructive storm. That period of time left a large amount of Americans battered, but those effected managed to make it through. As a new age dawns in the United States, so does a new challenge. The crisis is that American leaders are omitting the Hispanic population to the point that their influences on politics, economics and education are being overlooked. These actions toward the Hispanic population need to be rectified. The reason is that according to the United States Census, Hispanics will constitute about 30 percent of the entire population by 2050, making their influence greater as the years go by. There is less chance of Hispanic influ...
Hispanics are the country’s largest and fastest growing minority, but they are not an easily identif...
Immigration in the US today is widely controversial and has become more of a humanitarian issue than...
The U.S. Census Bureau (Research and Markets, 2008) predicted that a quarter of all U.S. citizens wi...
In 2019 the Hispanic population of the United States surpassed sixty million—or sixty-four million i...
This issue brief outlines the general concerns of the Latino American population regarding their per...
High school-age Hispanics have a 50 percent drop-out rate. College-age Hispanic youth account for on...
Economist Richard Fry, senior research associate at the Pew Hispanic Center, a Washington think tank...
The emergence of Donald Trump’s candidacy put Latinos in the national spotlight as undocumented immi...
Samuel Huntington argues that the sheer number, concentration, linguistic homogeneity, and other cha...
The 2010 Census showed a dramatic rise in Hispanic population. Due to this increase, the Census pred...
Natural increase—more births than deaths—is now the major engine of Hispanic population growth in ma...
ment and poverty rates, neither of which declined over this period. Th e most signifi cant economic ...
This publication presents an overview of the demographic changes taking place in the United States a...
This paper explores the veracity of the Hispanic Paradox. I talk about the diversity and complexity ...
By 2043, its projected that there will not be one single racial or ethnic group that would dominate ...
Hispanics are the country’s largest and fastest growing minority, but they are not an easily identif...
Immigration in the US today is widely controversial and has become more of a humanitarian issue than...
The U.S. Census Bureau (Research and Markets, 2008) predicted that a quarter of all U.S. citizens wi...
In 2019 the Hispanic population of the United States surpassed sixty million—or sixty-four million i...
This issue brief outlines the general concerns of the Latino American population regarding their per...
High school-age Hispanics have a 50 percent drop-out rate. College-age Hispanic youth account for on...
Economist Richard Fry, senior research associate at the Pew Hispanic Center, a Washington think tank...
The emergence of Donald Trump’s candidacy put Latinos in the national spotlight as undocumented immi...
Samuel Huntington argues that the sheer number, concentration, linguistic homogeneity, and other cha...
The 2010 Census showed a dramatic rise in Hispanic population. Due to this increase, the Census pred...
Natural increase—more births than deaths—is now the major engine of Hispanic population growth in ma...
ment and poverty rates, neither of which declined over this period. Th e most signifi cant economic ...
This publication presents an overview of the demographic changes taking place in the United States a...
This paper explores the veracity of the Hispanic Paradox. I talk about the diversity and complexity ...
By 2043, its projected that there will not be one single racial or ethnic group that would dominate ...
Hispanics are the country’s largest and fastest growing minority, but they are not an easily identif...
Immigration in the US today is widely controversial and has become more of a humanitarian issue than...
The U.S. Census Bureau (Research and Markets, 2008) predicted that a quarter of all U.S. citizens wi...