Press
Release
April 16, 2008
Contact: Michelle Mittelstadt
202-266-1910
mmittelstadt@migrationpolicy.org
New MPI Report Assesses Immigrant Integration Needs, Opportunities
in a Region that Serves as a National Laboratory
WASHINGTON – Given the size of today’s immigration
flows, the pressure the globalizing economy is placing on U.S.
communities and the aging native-born workforce, the public and
private sectors should devote far more attention to the integration
of immigrants into U.S. classrooms, workplaces and civic life,
says a new report from the Migration Policy Institute.
Though much of the current debate in Washington and around the
United States is chiefly focused on illegal immigration, the
report, Los Angeles on the Leading Edge: Immigrant
Integration Indicators and Their Policy Implications, comprehensively
details the need for development and implementation of coordinated
integration strategies and policies that will benefit immigrants
and the broader U.S. society alike.
“Despite the transformative nature of immigrant demographic
trends in recent decades, the integration of immigrants remains
an afterthought in policy discussions and could be considered
one of the most overlooked issues in American governance,” said
one of the report’s authors, MPI Vice President Michael
Fix.
As the largest immigrant metropolis in the nation, with
more than one-third of its 9.9 million residents comprised of
immigrants, Los Angeles County stands at the leading edge of
national immigration trends because of demography, geography
and history – and
thus can serve as a policy laboratory for other U.S. communities.
While
the immigrant population grew dramatically from the 1970s through
the mid-1990s, the story today is Los Angeles’ transition
from city of immigrants to one dominated by their American children,
with over half of students in the Los Angeles schools the U.S.-born
children of immigrants (known as the second generation.)
“With
naturalization rates up, new immigrant flows declining and the
emergence of the second generation, Los Angeles is positioned to catalyze smart
investments in state and regional integration policy – even in the absence
of coherent national action,” said co-author Margie McHugh, who directs
MPI’s National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy with Fix.
The MPI
report, by Fix, McHugh, Aaron Matteo Terrazas and Laureen Laglagaron,
found that:
- Nearly half of the Los Angeles County workforce is foreign-born
- Over 40 percent of all students in Los Angeles schools are
English Language Learners – the great majority of them
U.S. citizens
- One-third of Los Angeles adults are English Language Learners
“The skills and energy of immigrants and their children
will help our society weather the retirement of the Baby Boom
generation and meet the challenges of the changing world economy,” said
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa. “Local governments
need the President and Congress to be full partners in helping
immigrant families maximize their success. The federal government
must step up to the plate not just on immigration reform, but
also in key immigrant integration areas such as education, health-care
access and adult English and workforce skills training.”
The
report finds that increased access to English language and civics
instruction as well as greater workplace acceptance of immigrants’ foreign
educational and professional credentials would speed and improve
their integration into the fabric of the broader society and
economy.
“This report makes clear that most institutions
could play a more active role to help immigrants and their children,” said
Antonia Hernández,
president and chief executive officer of the California Community Foundation,
which funded the MPI research. “The only way we can tap into immigrants’ full
potential and improve Los Angeles County’s competitiveness is through
social integration, economic mobility, educational opportunity and civic engagement.’’
The
report is available online at: www.migrationpolicy.org/pubs/NCIIP_Los_Angeles_on_the_Leading_Edge.pdf
###
This report is a product of MPI’s National Center on Immigrant
Integration Policy, with generous support from the California
Community Foundation.
The Migration Policy Institute is an independent, nonpartisan,
nonprofit think tank dedicated to analysis of the movement of
people worldwide. Founded in 2001, MPI provides analysis, development
and evaluation of migration and refugee policies at the local,
national and international levels. It aims to meet the rising
demand for pragmatic and thoughtful responses to the challenges
and opportunities that large-scale migration, whether voluntary
or forced, presents to communities and institutions in an increasingly
integrated world.
The California Community Foundation, founded in 1915, is one of
the leading philanthropic organizations in Los Angeles County,
managing more than $1 billion in assets. Each year, it gives out
more than $100 million in grants to invest in the future of our
local communities. The foundation partners with individual donors
and actively supports nonprofit organizations to address diverse
and dynamic needs of our communities. The expertise and commitment
of CCF enables individuals, families and organizations to fulfill
their charitable goals and dreams. To learn more, visit the foundation’s
Web site at www.calfund.org. |