Immigration

A 670-Mile-Long Shrine To American Insecurity

Last February, I found myself in the difficult position of explaining American insecurity to a group of Mexican undergraduates at a college in Matamoros, Mexico, just south of the border at Brownsville, Texas. I was taking questions after delivering a lecture on the long-term prospects of Mexican immigrants being accepted into U.S. society. A neatly dressed young man in the back stood up to ask a pointed question. "How," he said politely in Spanish, "could such a rich and powerful… more

Tomas Jimenez on the Pat Morrison Show | 'Mexican Americans, Assimilations, and Race'

Mexican Americans, Assimilations, and Race (KPCC Radio, Los Angeles)

Mexican Americans have not fully integrated into U.S. society, even by the third and fourth generation, according to a new UCLA study covering 40 years. Although many speak English fluently, prefer American music, and sometimes vote Republican, they continue to live in majority Hispanic neighborhoods and think of themselves as "Mexican" or "Mexican-American." Patt looks at the findings, both encouraging and troubling, and the reasons behind them.

New America Fellow… more

March 18, 2008

Gregory Rodriguez on The Colbert Report | Interview

Gregory Rodriguez Interviews with Steven Colbert (The Colbert Report)

New America Foundation's Gregory Rodriguez appeared on The Colbert Report to promote his new book, Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans and Vagabonds.

Video of the interview is posted here:

Gregory Rodriguez | March 5, 2008

Reihan Salam

Schwartz Fellow

Reihan Salam writes on politics, culture, and technology, and was previously an associate editor at The Atlantic, a producer for NBC News, a junior editor and editorial researcher at The New York Times, a research associate at the Council on Foreign Relations, and a reporter-researcher at The New Republic. He is the co-author of… more

The Lost Children

In the summer of 1995, an Iranian man named Majid Yourdkhani allowed a friend to photocopy pages from “The Satanic Verses,” the Salman Rushdie novel, at the small print shop that he owned in Tehran. Government agents arrested the friend and came looking for Majid, who secretly crossed the border to Turkey and then flew to Canada. In his haste, Majid was forced to leave behind his wife, Masomeh; for months afterward, Iranian government agents phoned her and said things… more

Margaret Talbot | The New Yorker | March 3, 2008

"Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds" in SF Chronicle | Questioning Immigrants' Desire to Assimilate

SF Chronicle | Questioning Immigrants' Desire to Assimilate

. . . Two new books diverge from the political approach to the simmering assimilation debate, one looking backward, another looking forward. Los Angeles Times columnist Gregory Rodriguez's provocatively titled "Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans, and Vagabonds: Mexican Immigration and the Future of Race in America" examines Mexican Americans' self-identity through history, from the Aztec conquest to 21st century immigration into the United States. Rodriguez makes a strong argument that the very… more

Gregory Rodriguez | March 2, 2008

Tomás Jiménez in Las Vegas Sun | 'English-Only Rule on Bus Relaxed'

English-Only Rule on Bus Relaxed; Compromise seen as model for dealing with immigration (Las Vegas Sun)

...To Tomas Jimenez, an Irvine fellow at the New America Foundation who studies immigration and assimilation, the policies, ordinances and laws seen across the nation are “all partially motivated by people who are disgruntled by a change in culture.” ...

Tomás Jiménez | February 23, 2008

Tomás Jiménez and Mark Krikorian Debate Immigration in LATimes.com Dust-Up

How should Californians concerned about immigration vote on Feb. 5? Is tougher enforcement yielding any positive results? What will the immigration debate look like a year from now? Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies, and UC San Deigo professor and New America Foundation fellow Tomás Jiménez debate.

For the full series on LATimes.com, please click here. 

Tomás Jiménez | February 8, 2008

Gregory Rodriguez in Chicago Tribune | 'Clinton's Hispanic Edge'

Clinton's Hispanic edge over Obama (Chicago Tribune)

Currently, at least eight black U.S. congressmen represent districts that are heavily Latino, according to Gregory Rodriguez, author of "Mongrels, Bastards, Orphans and Vagabonds: Mexican Immigration and the Future of Race in America."

Gregory Rodriguez | January 30, 2008

Tomás Jiménez on SignOn San Diego | 'Immigration and Assimilation'

Immigration and Assimilation (SignOn San Diego Radio/"Op-Ed Talk")

Tomas Jimenez, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of California San Diego and a fellow at the New America Foundation discusses immigration and how well immigrants eventually blend into the society of their new country. Jimenez's most recent column, "Immigrants and what's good for society," appeared Dec. 7.

Tomás Jiménez | January 2, 2008