Legal immigration to the United States has increased sharply in recent years, and shows no signs of slowing down. The question of why immigration has grown so rapidly and the implications of this growth for the future are expected to be issues in the 105th Congress. Primarily because of legislation enacted in 1980 and 1986, the numerical restrictions of the basic family and employment-based immigration preference system became less significant. The growth in legal immigration during the past 15 years came in three groups admitted outside these numerical limits -- legalized aliens, refugees, and numerically exempt immediate relatives of U.S. citizens. For example, about 2.8 million illegal or undocumented aliens were "legalized" betw...
The US economy grows as a result of higher labor force growth and productivity growth. Immigration i...
This report provides a 100-year look at the impact of immigration on the nation's demographics since...
The United States Immigration Act of 1965 was followed by a steep upward trend in total immigration,...
Report detailing the sharp growth in U.S. legal immigration from 1981 to 1995, including statistics,...
The question of how many legal immigrants should be admitted to the United States -- and what level ...
Examines 1980-2007 trends in growth, concentration, and dispersion of immigrants and their U.S.-born...
M igration has always been a significant part of human life. For millennia, humans have traveled fro...
This paper provides a recommendation for setting evidence-backed immigration levels that combat the ...
The immigration laws in our country have been influenced by population growth and distribution, as w...
With the gradual rollback of the national origins quota system in the 1950s and its eventual repeal ...
This report examines the relationship between immigration and sustained U.S. economic growth. As the...
[Excerpt] Population projections made by both the U.S. Census Bureau and the National Research Counc...
This Article argues that recent years have brought a growing concern that national immigration polic...
Immigrant numbers should be taken in the context of native population growth or decline to better un...
Today more than ever the United States is a target for international migration. Population growth an...
The US economy grows as a result of higher labor force growth and productivity growth. Immigration i...
This report provides a 100-year look at the impact of immigration on the nation's demographics since...
The United States Immigration Act of 1965 was followed by a steep upward trend in total immigration,...
Report detailing the sharp growth in U.S. legal immigration from 1981 to 1995, including statistics,...
The question of how many legal immigrants should be admitted to the United States -- and what level ...
Examines 1980-2007 trends in growth, concentration, and dispersion of immigrants and their U.S.-born...
M igration has always been a significant part of human life. For millennia, humans have traveled fro...
This paper provides a recommendation for setting evidence-backed immigration levels that combat the ...
The immigration laws in our country have been influenced by population growth and distribution, as w...
With the gradual rollback of the national origins quota system in the 1950s and its eventual repeal ...
This report examines the relationship between immigration and sustained U.S. economic growth. As the...
[Excerpt] Population projections made by both the U.S. Census Bureau and the National Research Counc...
This Article argues that recent years have brought a growing concern that national immigration polic...
Immigrant numbers should be taken in the context of native population growth or decline to better un...
Today more than ever the United States is a target for international migration. Population growth an...
The US economy grows as a result of higher labor force growth and productivity growth. Immigration i...
This report provides a 100-year look at the impact of immigration on the nation's demographics since...
The United States Immigration Act of 1965 was followed by a steep upward trend in total immigration,...