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Rethinking Global Migration MARCELO M. SUÁREZ-OROZCO Ross University Professor at New York University Co-Director, Immigration NYU

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Presentation on theme: "Rethinking Global Migration MARCELO M. SUÁREZ-OROZCO Ross University Professor at New York University Co-Director, Immigration NYU"— Presentation transcript:

1 Rethinking Global Migration MARCELO M. SUÁREZ-OROZCO Ross University Professor at New York University Co-Director, Immigration Studies @ NYU www.nyu.education/immigration NYU, August 12, 2010

2 The Age of Global Vertigo

3 Global Migration Global Migration

4 Utopia and Dystopia Utopia and Dystopia

5 Love and Work

6 War ar and Work (and War)

7 Environmental Migration

8 Migration by Development Migration by Development

9 Migration by Continent

10 Transnational Migration, UNPD, 2010, 214 Million – in 2007: Transnational Migration, UNPD, 2010, 214 Million – in 2007: 53 million North South 61 million 62 million 14 million North South

11 http://www.migrationinformation.org/datahub/charts/6.1.shtml Comparative Transnational Migration, in 2010 US has 43 Million Immigrants, in 2005:

12 Rate of Immigration, USA 1890-2010 Rate of Immigration, USA 1890-2010

13 The New Immigration and the New, New Immigration Top Countries of Birth, 2008 Country of Birth2006% 1. Mexico11,534,97230.8 2. Philippines1,634,1174.4 3. India1,505,3514.0 4. China1,357,4823.6 5. Vietnam1,116,1563.0 6. El Salvador1,042,2182.8 7. Korea1,021,2122.7 8. Cuba932,5632.5 9. Canada847,2282.3 10. Dominican Republic764,9302.0 11. Guatemala740,9862.0 12. Jamaica643,0671.7 Adapted from Pew Hispanic Center, 2008

14 The Cultural Psychology of Immigration  Immigration is “of and for” the Family  Separations and Re-Unifications  Transnationalism of the Heart: by the end of the decade remittances surpassed 350 billion dollars – more than double the combined world international aid-India received $27 billion, China $25.7 billion, Mexico $25 billion, Philippines $17 billion (World Bank, 2008)

15 Distribution of Children by Race and Ethnicity: 1990, 2008, and 2030 * Non-Hispanic. Estimates for 2008 and 2030 for Whites, Blacks and Others are for those who identify with only one race. Source: U.S. Census Bureau and National Center for Health Statistics

16 Transgenerational Asymmetry Age-Sex Pyramid for Non-Hispanic Whites in the United States, 2006 Current Population Survey

17 Transgenerational Asymmetry Age-Sex Pyramid for Native-Born Hispanics in the United States, 2006 Current Population Survey

18 The End of Immigration


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