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Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Immigration Studies Program The Urban Institute U.S. Latinos, 2000: Nativity & Citizenship Pew Hispanic Center Western Knight.

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Presentation on theme: "Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Immigration Studies Program The Urban Institute U.S. Latinos, 2000: Nativity & Citizenship Pew Hispanic Center Western Knight."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Immigration Studies Program The Urban Institute U.S. Latinos, 2000: Nativity & Citizenship Pew Hispanic Center Western Knight Center for Specialized Journalism Los Angeles -- February 7, 2002

2 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Nativity & Citizenship Topics Immigration Demography -- Numbers for Stocks & Flows -- Legal Status & Origins Geographic Trends Immigration & Voting -- Factors Affecting Turnout Socioeconomic Integration -- Legal Status & Generations

3 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. U.S. Population (2000) Births (annual) Deaths Legal Immigration Undoc. Immigration Emigration Growth Rate (Very Rapid) 281 million 4 million - 2.3 million 800,000 250,000-500,000 -250,000 0.8 % U.S. Population -- Basics

4 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Current In-Flows are Very High * Additional immigrants are mostly illegals and legalized aliens Europe/Canada (Legal) Additional* All Other (Legal)

5 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Multiple Goals of Immigration Policy Economic -- Competitiveness, Jobs Social -- Family Unification Moral -- Human Rights Cultural -- Pluralism Legal -- Sovereignty, Security, Rule of Law

6 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Selected Immigration Laws Exclusions 1885 -- Chinese 1907 -- Japanese 1917 -- Asians & “Illiterates” S. & E. Europe Quotas & Limits 1921, 1924, 1952 Repeal of Discriminatory Quotas 1965 -- Eastern Hemisphere 1976 -- Western Hemisphere

7 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Revised Immigration Laws Refugee Act of 1980 International, ideological standards Outside preference system Immig. Reform & Control Act, 1986 Employer sanctions Legalization programs Immigration Act of 1990 40% increase in immigration Employment categories tripled Diversity category created

8 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. 1996 Immigration Laws Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 -------- Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 -------- Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996

9 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. The Policy Context Legal: 600-750,000/year Humanitarian: 70-125,000 Undoc.: 250-500,000 or more (?)

10 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Immigrant Numbers at Peak -- 14.8 Percent 31.1 Million (Preliminary Census 2000) 4.7 Percent ~11 Percent (estimated) Percentage is Not

11 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Most Legal Immigrants from Latin America & Asia Other Latin AmericaAsia MexicoEurope & Canada All Other 2.5 Million 3.3 Million 4.5 Million 7.7 Million 6.0 Million * Excludes IRCA legalizations Millions of Legal Immigrants

12 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Immigrant-Dominated Populations Latinos & Asians * Not Hispanic Percent Foreign-Born from 2000 CPS-based estimates Total Population 11.1% Foreign-Born

13 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Latin Americans & Asians Dominate Foreign-Born 30.5 Million Foreign-Born (Census 2000 Supplementary Survey)

14 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Hispanics & Asians Dominate Foreign-Born 30.5 Million Foreign-Born (March 2000 CPS & Census 2000 Supplementary Survey)

15 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Legal Status of Immigrants ~30.5 Million Foreign-Born (Based on March 2000 CPS, Census 2000, & Author’s Estimates) Legal Aliens (LPR) (9.3 million) 30% Legal Nonimmigrants (1.3 million) 4% Naturalized Citizens (9.4 million) 30% Refugee Arrivals* (2.3 million) 8% Undocumented Aliens (8.5 million) 28% (Preliminary) * Entered 1980 or later

16 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Undocumented Clearly at New High -- Trend Uncertain Millions of Illegal Aliens Living in the U.S. Apr-80Jun-89Jan-82Jun-86Oct-96Oct-92Apr-2000 (Preliminary estimates by author)

17 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Undocumented Are Largely Latin American ~8.5 Million in April 2000 (Estimated with Census 2000 Supplementary Survey)

18 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Rapid Growth of Mexican Population Thousands of Migrants in U.S.Percent Mexican of Foreign-Born

19 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. New Flows from Mexico Dominated by Undocumented Mexican-Born Population in U.S.(in millions) Note: Labels show total population (in millions) and percent undocumented. About half of all Mexican immigrants in the U.S. are undocumented. (Preliminary estimates by author)

20 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. The New Immigration 4 Scale 4 Diversity 4 Pace Concentration

21 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Immigrants Are Concentrated

22 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Undocumented Concentrated (Preliminary)

23 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Concentration is High, But New Centers Emerge in ‘90s Percent Growth in Foreign-Born Population

24 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Immigration Categories Major Destinations (70% of Immigrants) (6) Traditional States (>250K in 1920) (8) New Growth States (1990-99 > 50%) (19) Other States (18) New Immigration Growth Centers

25 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Mexicans Diversify, Too Percent of U.S. Mexicans

26 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Immigrants Live in Cities and Suburbs Percent of Population, March 1999 CPS

27 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Changed Voting Patterns Immigrant-Center Populations -- Latinos & Asians -- Rapid Growth -- Not Numerically Large Critical Factor? -- Evenly-Balanced Electorate -- Magnified Impact -- Locality-Specific

28 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Rapid Growth in Latino & Asian Votes -- ‘96 to ‘00 Note: In millions. Percent Growth 1996 to 2000 CPS

29 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Voting Power Factors Demographic Factors -- Eligibility / Citizenship -- Age Structure Political Factors -- Registration Completeness -- Turnout of Registered Voters -- Citizenship / Naturalization

30 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Percent of Population, November 2000 Dilution of Latinos & Asians (Based on November 2000 CPS & estimates from March 2000 CPS)

31 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Naturalization & Registration Will Boost Latino-Asian Vote * Not Hispanic. Based on November 2000 CPS.

32 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Naturalizations Surge in Wake of IRCA Thousands of Immigrants, Naturalizations, or Petitions

33 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Millions Not Naturalized Yet Note: In millions. Millions of persons aged 18 & older Percent naturalized November 2000 & March 2000 CPS 7.1 (38%) 5.1 (57%) 5.9 (59%) 1.2 (54%)

34 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Percent Naturalized of Legal Immigrants November 2000 Naturalize Younger Aliens

35 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Registered Voters as Percent of “Eligible” November 2000 CPS Register Young & Old

36 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Turnout Differences Minor Voters as Percent of Registrations November 2000 CPS

37 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Potential Impacts Continued Growth in Immigrant-Center Populations -- Latinos & Asians, Especially Limits to “Full Presence” -- High % of Children -- Undocumented & Other Aliens Continued Criticality? -- Evenly-Balanced Electorate

38 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Action Items Naturalize (to Highest Group by Age) + 800,000 Latino votes Register Voters (to White level) + 900,000 Latino votes Turnout Voters (to White level) + 600,000 Latino votes Total Potential Impact + 2.3 million Latino votes (+40%) + 600,000 Asian votes

39 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Education Tied to Status Less than High School Graduate Bachelor’s Degree or Beyond Natives Percent of Persons Aged 25-64 Years, 1998

40 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Generational Composition * Not Hispanic. Based on March 2000 CPS.

41 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Age Structure of Generations Driven by Different Forces 1stGeneration:Age Structure of Immigration2ndGeneration:TrendsinImmigration3rd+Generation: Trends in Fertility & MortalityTotalPopulation:LargestGeneration(3rd+) Source: March 1999 CPS

42 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Percent of Ages 20-30 Who Completed High School or GED Strong Progress — H.S. Completion (Based on March 1995-98 CPS & 1980 Census)

43 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Percent of Ages 25-30 Who Completed Four Years of College Some Progress — College Degrees (Based on March 1995-98 CPS & 1980 Census)

44 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Integration is Dynamic Undocumented Aliens Refugees (post-1980) LPR Aliens Natives $50,200 Entered after 1988Entered before 1988 Naturalized LPRs

45 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Median in 1996 dollars for households headed by persons 20-30 Median Household Income (Based on March 1995-98 CPS & 1980 Census)

46 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Immigrant Households Larger Undocumented Aliens Refugees (post-1980) LPR Aliens Natives 2.51 Entered after 1988Entered before 1988 Naturalized LPRs

47 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Income per Person Can Suffer Undocumented Aliens Refugees (post-1980) LPR Aliens Natives $20,000 Entered after 1988Entered before 1988 Naturalized LPRs

48 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Percent of Females Aged 20-30 in the Labor Force Female Labor Force Participation (Based on March 1995-98 CPS & 1980 Census)

49 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Percent of Ages 20-30 Who Are Currently Divorced of Separated Currently Divorced or Separated (Based on March 1995-98 CPS & 1980 Census)

50 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Coming Policy Issues Nonimmigrant Tracking National ID Amnesty / Legalization Guest Workers High-Tech Agriculture Impact on Social Security High Immigration Low Fertility

51 THE URBAN INSTITUTE / Washington, D.C. Integration Reform -- A Modest Proposal Language Acquisition & Access Access to Legal Status Access to Social Safety Net School Reform & Immigrants Impact Aid & Offsets

52 For more information, contact: Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Immigration Studies Program Population Studies Center Urban Institute 2100 M St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037 Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Immigration Studies Program Population Studies Center Urban Institute 2100 M St., N.W. Washington, D.C. 20037 (202) 261-5678 jpassel@ui.urban.org www.urban.org


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