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Reyes, Pedro; Garza, Encarnacion; Trueba, Enrique T. – Paradigm Publishers, 2004
This book elucidates the amazing life journeys of academically successful migrant students. Most literature on Hispanic students--especially the children of migrant farm workers who have been referred to as the "invisible children," or the children of "ghost workers"--has focused on the sociocultural factors that have contributed to their low…
Descriptors: Migrant Children, Educational Policy, Agricultural Laborers, Academic Achievement
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McAllister, Ian – 1991
This report examines patterns of social mobility in Australia by comparing Maltese, Lebanese, and Vietnamese immigrants with an Australian-born control group. The data come from a 1988-89 national opinion survey conducted on behalf of the Australian Office of Multicultural Affairs. The survey over-sampled several overseas-born groups, with samples…
Descriptors: Economic Factors, Educational Background, Employment Patterns, Foreign Countries
Pedraza, Silvia – 1998
This paper offers a conceptual "map" of issues and approaches in immigration research and illustrates features of the map with the significant contributions of Latino Studies to immigration research. One axis of the map concerns the time line of various waves of immigration. Although research on immigrants and immigration processes was a…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Ethnic Studies, Higher Education, Hispanic Americans
Ku, Leighton; Freilich, Alyse – 2001
This report assesses how the loss of Medicaid coverage following welfare reform has influenced changes in health care systems for immigrants in four urban areas: Los Angeles, California; New York, New York; Houston, Texas; and Miami, Florida. Survey data indicate that over half of low-income immigrants were uninsured in 1998, a level roughly…
Descriptors: Child Health, Federal Legislation, Health Insurance, Health Services
Capps, Randy; Passel, Jeffrey S.; Perez-Lopez, Daniel; Fix, Michael – 2003
This guidebook is designed to help local policy makers, program implementers, and advocates use U.S. Census and other data sources to identify immigrant populations in their local communities (their characteristics, contributions, and needs). It lists relevant data sources, the information contained in each, where they can be located, and software…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, English (Second Language), Family Characteristics, Immigrants
Berry, E. Helen; Kirschner, Annabel – 2002
Between 1990 and 2000, the Hispanic population of the West increased by 54 percent, compared to a 13 percent increase for non-Hispanics. The Hispanic population now represents 25 percent of the West's population, up from 19 percent in 1990. This information brief describes the increase in Hispanic populations in the West from 1990 to 2000 and…
Descriptors: Age Groups, Census Figures, Educational Attainment, Educational Needs
Capps, Randy; Ku, Leighton; Fix, Michael; Furgiuele, Chris; Passel, Jeff; Ramchand, Rajeev; McNiven, Scott; Perez-Lopez, Dan; Fielder, Eve; Greenwell, Michael; Hays, Tonya – 2002
In 1999 and 2000, immigrants in Los Angeles, California, and New York, New York were aurveyed about their status in the context of welfare reform, examining the living conditions of 3,447 immigrant families roughly 3 years after welfare reform was implemented and several months before the federal government issued guidance about the public charge…
Descriptors: Child Welfare, Employment, Family Needs, Health Insurance
Falk, Candace; Reese, Lyn; Dougherty, Mary Agnes – 2001
Emma Goldman (1869-1940) is a major figure in the history of radicalism and feminism in the United States. In a period when the expression of controversial ideas was dangerous, Goldman insisted on her right to challenge convention. She was among the most prominent advocates of labor's right to organize, reproductive rights, sexual freedom, freedom…
Descriptors: Curriculum Enrichment, Feminism, Freedom of Speech, High Schools
Wepman, Dennis – 2002
It can be said that U.S. immigration started in 1607, when the first settlers joined the original colonists on the shores of the United States. Since then, people of every nation, ethnicity, and class have come to the United States, looking for freedom, prosperity, and stability. While originally immigrants flowed freely into the United States,…
Descriptors: American Dream, Elementary Secondary Education, Immigrants, Immigration
Borjas, George J. – 1999
This book discusses the economics of immigration, analyzing immigrants' skills, national origins, welfare use, economic mobility, and impact on the labor market and using new data to trace current trends in ethnic segregation. Twelve chapters examine (1) "Reframing the Immigration Debate"; (2) "The Skills of Immigrants"; (3)…
Descriptors: Economic Impact, Economics, Ghettos, Human Capital
Vermeulen, Hans, Ed.; Perlmann, Joel, Ed. – 2000
This book contains a collection of essays by Dutch and American scholars on the complex relationship between structural and cultural forces shaping the life chances of ethnic minorities. The papers are: (1) "Introduction: The Role of Culture in Explanations of Social Mobility" (Hans Vermeulen); (2) "Introduction: The Persistence of…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Blacks, Cultural Differences, Cultural Influences
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Ovando, Carlos J. – Bilingual Research Journal, 2003
Various interpretations of the historical forces affecting U.S. language policy and attitudes toward bilingual education are examined. Changing political, social, and economic forces, rather than any consistent ideology, have shaped the nation's responses to language diversity. U.S. language ideology has shifted with changing historical events,…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Educational Attitudes, Educational History, Educational Policy
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Griswold del Castillo, Richard – Aztlan: A Journal of Chicano Studies, 2002
Mexican public opinion about emigrants to the United States has gradually changed from that of "cultural traitors." The Mexican government has increasingly come to see Chicano political leaders as important to Mexico's relationship with the United States, while Mexican intellectuals increasingly regard Chicano academics as their allies…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Attitude Change, College Faculty, Foreign Countries
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Nwadiora, Emeka – Western Journal of Black Studies, 1996
Informs helping professionals about the unique history and challenges of African families to guide them toward providing ethnically sensitive psychological services to African immigrant families in need. African families undergo great stress when faced with the alienation of being Black and African in a Euro-American culture. (SLD)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), African Culture, Blacks, Ethnicity
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Maxwell, Mary Percival; And Others – Canadian Journal of Education, 1996
Data from 811 high school students from two city schools with good reputations for academic achievement in Toronto (Canada) show that ethnic groups of more recent arrival (immigration) to Canada show higher levels of occupational ambition than Anglo-Canadians and Euro-Canadians. Females appear to have higher ambitions than males. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Career Choice, Ethnicity, Foreign Countries
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