Education and Immigrant Integration in the United States and Canada
This report compares U.S. and Canadian approaches to immigrant integration through education, urging a policy shift that includes debate of integration, not just admissions.
Two sets of facts associated with current levels and forms of immigration in the United States and Canada complicate its governance. First, immigration has grown sharply higher and immigrant origins have expanded enormously in both countries. Second, immigrant groups are branching out from the largest cities, which have had substantial experience with managing successive waves of internal and international migration, to smaller cities, suburban areas and, increasingly, rural communities. These places are less well prepared to adjust to the new influxes.
This report looks at the education and immigrant integration efforts in both the United States and Canada. For too long, far too much energy—as policymakers, analysts, and citizens—has been devoted to immigration policies and the associated disagreements about who should be admitted, under what circumstances, and with what priorities in mind. This volume of essays discusses the investment needed in assisting newcomers to become members of their new communities. The themes discussed in these essays are suggestive of where to start and of the challenges ahead.
About the Global Program
The Global Program bridges policy advice, research, and candid dialogue to design effective migration policies, drawing on global evidence and anticipating the forces reshaping how people move.
About the National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy
The Center is a national hub connecting policymakers, educators, community leaders, and service providers with evidence-informed policy research, technical assistance, and data to advance effective immigrant integration at U.S., state, and local levels.