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Report and Panel
Overcrowded Housing Among Immigrant and Native-Born Workers ([link removed])
By Steven A. Camarota and Karen Zeigler, October 8, 2020
Excerpt: Our analysis indicates that overcrowding is much more pronounced among immigrant workers (14.3 percent) than their native-born counterparts (3.5 percent). Immigrants account for nearly half of workers living in overcrowded conditions, but only about 17 percent of all workers. This is a concern because research shows that overcrowding can facilitate the spread of communicable diseases, including some new research on Covid-19.
Featured Posts
Those Favoring Judicial Activism on Immigration Will Likely Be Disappointed With a Justice Barrett: And that is how it should be ([link removed])
By Andrew R. Arthur
If she is confirmed, don't expect Justice Amy Coney Barrett to break new ground on immigration. Expect her, however, to apply the law as written, and under prevailing standards of review. That would be her job, and she appears particularly positioned to do it well.
One-Word Amendment to the Florida Constitutional Amendment to Prohibit Aliens from Voting ([link removed])
By Dan Cadman
During the November election, in addition to choosing a new president and dozens of state and local officials, Florida voters will be asked to consider a constitutional amendment to prohibit non-citizens from voting in state elections, added to the ballot by an initiative gathering nearly 1 million signatures.
Donald Trump vs. Joe Biden on Immigration: Two (almost exclusively) divergent views ([link removed])
By Andrew R. Arthur
With the 2020 presidential election four weeks away, the country is (pending some new "black swan event" in a year that has seen a bevy of them) faced with two choices as it relates to immigration enforcement: President Trump's ongoing enforcement efforts, and the proposals of former Vice President Joe Biden. Suffice it to say that they are significantly divergent.
Refugee Resettlement Roundup for FY 2020 ([link removed])
By Nayla Rush
In FY 2020, which ended last week, a total of 11,814 refugees were resettled in the United States, under a refugee ceiling of 18,000. These admissions are to be viewed under a unique spotlight: the Covid-19 pandemic that affected most of FY 2020. Strict measures (such as travel restrictions, closing of borders, etc.) were undertaken as early as January 2020 by many countries, including the United States, in an effort to contain this contagious virus that appeared in China around December 2019.
More Blog Posts
* Rep. Mo Brooks Introduces H-1B Reform and OPT Suspension Bill ([link removed])
* A Disingenuous Critique of Our Refugee Report ([link removed])
* Au Pair Program Curtailed, Its Wages Raised by Three Conservative Entities ([link removed])
* Another Good Reason to Limit the $68 Billion in Remittances — Covid-19 ([link removed])
* New H-1B Rules to Protect American Workers ([link removed])
* Household Overcrowding Facilitates the Spread of Covid-19 ([link removed])
* EOIR Clarifies Standard for Supporting Evidence in Asylum Cases: Also codifies in regulation IJ submissions to the record and cleans up a 'zombie regulation ([link removed])
* The Government Announces Stricter H-1B Provisions for Outsourcing Firms ([link removed])
* Immigration Affects the Issues Most Important to Voters: Survey shows it's fallen on their list of priorities — but shapes everything above it ([link removed])
* The Mob Tries to Cancel a Company for the Crime of Selling its Products to ICE ([link removed])
* The Location of More Than 682,000 Overseas Social Security Beneficiaries: Our annual emigration report ([link removed])
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Andrew Arthur, the Center's Resident Fellow in Law and Policy, discusses Kamala Harris' immigration policy proposals in light of the vice presidential debate.
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Todd Bensman, the Center’s Senior National Security Fellow, discusses the breakup of the latest migrant caravan from Honduras and why the outcome of the next caravan may be different.
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