As the year comes to a close, The Immigration Policy Center brings you its top 10 list of resources from 2009. Our materials are provided in an effort to shape a rational conversation on immigration and immigrant integration. Through our research and analysis, we strive to provide policymakers, the media, and the general public with accurate information about the role of immigrants and immigration policy on U.S. society.
2. Untying the Knot Series. An in-depth analysis of labor department data that debunks the myth that immigrants are taking jobs from native-born citizens and therefore comprehensive immigration reform must not be done during a recession.
4. State Fact Sheets on the economic benefits immigrants, Asians and Latinos bring to their respective states.
5. Essential to the Fight: Immigrants in the Military, Eight Years After 9/11. This report highlights the critical role immigrants are playing in today's military. The report notes that without the contributions of immigrants, the military could not meet its recruiting goals and could not fill its need for foreign-language translators, interpreters and cultural experts.
7. Made in America, Myths & Facts about Birthright Citizenship Series including: Defining American Birthright Citizenship and the Original Understanding of the 14th Amendment, by James C. Ho; Policy Arguments in Favor of Retaining America's Birthright Citizenship Law, by Margaret D. Stock; Debunking Modern Arguments Against Birthright Citizenship, by Elizabeth B. Wydra; and A New Nativism: Anti-Immigration Politics and the Fourteenth Amendment, by Eric Ward.
8. Latino and Asian Clout in the Voting Booth: Census Data Underscores Growing Power of Minority Voters. Voting data from the 2008 election, released in late July by the U.S. Census Bureau, illustrates the growing electoral power of minority voters. A comparison of Current Population Survey data on voters in the 2004 and 2008 elections reveals the extent to which the ranks of Latino, Asian, and black voters have increased in only four years.
9. Citizenship by the Numbers. This fact sheet documents the growing number of U.S. citizens who are immigrants to this country - or who are the children of immigrants. Roughly one-in-seventeen U.S. citizens are foreign-born, and tens of millions of native-born U.S. citizens have immigrant parents.
For more information contact Wendy Sefsaf at wsefsaf@immcouncil.org or 202-507-7524. Immigration Policy Center, 1331 G Street. NW Suite 200, Washington, DC 20005 United States