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  1. #1
    Senior Member elpasoborn's Avatar
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    Illegal Immigrants Move from America's Edges to the Center

    Illegal Immigrants Move from America's Edges to the Center
    By DANNY KING Posted 11:00 AM 02/10/11 Economy, People

    Illegal Immigrants Move from America's Edges to the Center
    Unauthorized immigrants have long been relegated to the fringes of the U.S. labor market. But according to a recent Pew Research Center study, that contingent is moving toward the center -- at least in the geographic sense.

    Illegal immigrants are moving away from New York, Florida and the Mountain West states like Arizona, Utah and Nevada, and moving toward states such as Texas, Oklahoma and Louisiana, the Pew Hispanic Center said in a report released last week.

    Between 2007 and 2010, Florida's illegal immigrant population fell by 2.3% to 825,000, marking the largest percentage drop for a single state, while the number of undocumented immigrants in New York fell 2% to 625,000. Arizona, Utah and Nevada's collective illegal immigrant population fell 1.6% to 700,000.

    Meanwhile, the undocumented immigrant population in Texas, Louisiana and Oklahoma rose by 2.4% to 1.8 million people over the same time period. California continues to host the largest population of illegal immigrants by far, accounting for 2.55 million, or 23% of the country's total last year, according to the report.

    The migration trends of illegal immigrants may offer a more accurate, up-to-the-minute portrayal of how regional economies are doing than the movement trends of U.S. citizens, who are more likely to be tied down by permanent jobs and family obligations.

    "At the national level, ups and downs in the unauthorized immigrant population tend to be associated with economic changes, so it makes sense that this could be a major factor at the state level too," said D'Vera Cohn, senior writer at the Pew Research Center and one of the report's authors.

    For instance, Nevada over the past decade has experienced a classic boom-and-bust economic cycle, with a surge in real estate activity being followed by a steep drop in both housing prices and tourism activity to Las Vegas. Utah has also seen its economy slow.

    "In Nevada, the high unemployment, collapse of construction, and slippage in tourism have all taken their toll," said Harley Shaiken, professor of education and geography at UC-Berkeley. "Regional variations reflect various issues. In Louisiana, for example, rebuilding from Katrina and the BP oil disaster both generated a need for labor."

    Politics can't be overlooked either. Most notably, Arizona last year signed the country's strictest bill on illegal immigrants into law, which led to widespread controversy over the state's attitude toward all immigrants. Enactment of the law led to tourism and product boycotts from citizens and groups in other parts of the U.S., who felt that the law would encourage harassment of and discrimination against Latinos. Nearly 6 out of 10 unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. come from Mexico, and with the addition of other Latin American countries, that number rises to about 8 out of 10.

    "In places like Arizona, the economy has been affected by some of the boycotts," said Martha Menchaca, professor of anthropology at the University of Texas, who added that the same geographic trends likely apply to legal immigrants and naturalized citizens as well. "If you're going to be in a state where they're hostile to you because of the way you speak, you're going to leave."

    Regardless, for the country as a whole, the unauthorized immigrant population was little changed in 2010 after two straight years of declines, indicating that political and economic problems abroad may again be outweighing the effects of stricter border policies and a high U.S. unemployment rate on immigration.

    In 2010, there were about 11.2 million unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. -- about 1 in 27 people in the country. That was down from 12 million in 2007, though up from 8.4 million at the beginning of the decade.

    What these shifts mean for the future of unauthorized immigrants within specific U.S. regions is anyone's guess, given the temporary nature of the work often filled by undocumented workers. Still, with the U.S. economy expecting to rebound, the total number of immigrants will likely reverse its recent decline over the next few years, Shaiken said.

    "The draw of a stronger economy and problems at home are likely to trump an unfavorable political atmosphere in the U.S.," said Shaiken. "Jobs here are vital and the drug violence in Central America and Mexico is both slowing their economies and fueling immigration."

    http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/illeg ... /19836314/

  2. #2
    Senior Member ReformUSA2012's Avatar
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    In a way this is a good thing keeping the illegals moving inward as we push them out of border states. Look at many people who are still being sheeple who don't see this issue as it is. Lets see if they wake in the timeframe of a year their community and schools get flooded by the mass exodus from the border states that are cracking down more.

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