Immigration Case Study "We are all immigrants, some of us arrive earlier and some of us later are different" is a good word from Ruiz (1997). From the 1930s to the 1970s most immigrants came from Europe, and recently only Mexicans began immigrants (Christie, 1998). The only difference is that when people migrate to Europe from here, they already have high income and education level (1998). It is difficult for immigrants from Mexico to maintain economic development (1998).
California has one-fourth of the country's foreign population and the most illegal immigrant population and is one of the best case studies of immigration work. Regarding this topic, the authors of the Rand report analyzed the state immigration model from 1970 to 1990, immigrants from most places seem to be at least completely involved in California society, at least the same as immigration history It was concluded that it was involved quickly. Economics But the education and income of Hispanic immigrants, especially immigrants from Mexico, is still lower than the education and income of first and second generation immigrant groups.
Note: A complete survey funded by Carnegie Corporation of New York and co-authored by Ann Duffett and Jean Johnson reports on immigration views on politics, discrimination, immigration and naturalization services, and immigration and other topics, and online Available in. Www.publicagenda.org. Attitudes of immigrant groups - Latin American outside Mexico, Mexico, Europe, East Asia, Caribbean - are illustrated in the report
This insightful anthropological study is one of the few undocumented immigration cases studies that improved groups of people who are often in statistics and type conversion. The suffering of Hispanic immigrants is reflected in immigrant's own accent, and the voice of the author is raising questions about authority, type change, settlement, assimilation to American society. Immigrants are confronted by contradictory social and intellectual needs, but face confrontation with a strange threatening environment. For some reason, the progress of immigration appears to improve the sense of harmony among immigrants. In many cases, affiliation, community and customs, and through the class. Ethnic symbols such as language and religious behavior remind them of their own immigration sources and can call these people outsiders in new places for these people.