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Posts Tagged ‘pew

picture-6Some rather disturbing data from the Pew Hispanic Research Center: 40% of sentenced offenders at the federal level were Latinos, a percentage which has almost doubled since 1991, when the rate was a “mere” 23%. Here’s the breakdown from Pew:

- Hispanics represented 40% of all sentenced federal offenders in 2007, the single largest racial and ethnic group among sentenced federal offenders. Whites constituted 27% of federal sentenced offenders and blacks 23%. The remainder (10%) are Asians, Native Americans and those whose race and ethnicity is indeterminate.

- More than seven-in-ten (72%) of Hispanics sentenced in federal courts in 2007 did not hold U.S. citizenship. They accounted for 29% of all federal offenders in 2007.

- Latino offenders who did not hold U.S. citizenship represented a greater share of all Latino offenders in 2007 than in 1991 — 72% versus 61%.

- Between 1991 and 2007, the number of Hispanics sentenced in federal courts nearly quadrupled (270%), rising faster than the number of offenders sentenced in federal courts over this period and accounting for 54% of the growth in the total number of offenders.

- In 2007, more than half (56%) of all Latino offenders were sentenced in just five of the nation’s 94 U.S. district courts. All five are located near the U.S.-Mexico border: the Southern (17%) and Western (15%) districts of Texas, the District of Arizona (11%), the Southern District of California (6%) and the District of New Mexico (6%).

One might wonder why the emphasis here in on federal offenders. That would be because the jarring statistics can also be attributed to federal “crimes” such as being undocumented.

Pew says the double whammy of increased immigration and increased enforcement of immigration laws is what is driving this upward trend in federal criminal sentences.

Via / Pew Hispanic Center

New Pew Report: America Split over Immigration

5:14 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · Comments Off

30 Mar 2006

Immigrants.jpgA new report released today by the Pew Hispanic Center shows that America is split on the topic of immigration:

…the public remains largely divided in its views of the overall effect of immigration. Roughly as many believe that newcomers to the U.S. strengthen American society as say they threaten traditional American values, and over the longer term, positive views of Latin American immigrants, in particular, have improved dramatically.

Reflecting this ambivalence, the public is split over many of the policy proposals aimed at dealing with the estimated 11.5 million-12 million unauthorized migrants in the U.S. Overall, 53% say people who are in the U.S. illegally should be required to go home, while 40% say they should be granted some kind of legal status that allows them to stay here.

If America is ambivalent, we are certainly seeing more one side than another in the media these days.

The Pew Report is comprehensive, posing real and honest questions related to the concept that Americans have of immigrants today. One of the data points show that Latinos are viewed more positively than they were over 10 years ago:

pew.jpg

Download the full report at the Pew website

Related: Former Reagan Civil Rights Commission director Linda Chavez believes that instead of protesting, immigrants should “trade their ancestral flags for the Stars and Stripes.” (NYT, registration required)

Via / Pew Hispanic Center

Pew: Unemployment not causing immigration

6:34 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration| mexico| society · 2 Comments

6 Dec 2005

15.jpgContrary to the old racist wives tale of “They can’t find a job in their country so they come here to take ours”, the Pew Hispanic Center has released a report which points to factors other than unemployment as catalysts for immigration northward:

The vast majority of undocumented migrants from Mexico were gainfully employed before they left for the United States, according to a Pew Hispanic Center report released today. The report suggests that failure to find work at home does not seem to be the primary reason that the estimated 6.3 million undocumented migrants from Mexico have
come to the U.S.

Read more…

Immigration and poverty related: qué sorpresa

1:00 pm By Jennifer Woodard Maderazo · Immigration · Comments Off

7 Nov 2005

clpogimage.jpgThe headline for an article from yesterday’s Washington Times affirms my idea that the “art” of headline writing is lost (it was reaffirmed this weekend in the Sunday NYT with the headline of an article about Israeli spas: “Going to a spa? Mazel Tov!”): “Immigration, Poverty Linked”. The article, nonetheless, is interesting:

So “immigration can have a large impact on the labor market,” he said, adding: “The wages of high school dropouts have fallen between 5 [percent] to 8 percent in the past 20 years.”

A recent report released by the Pew Hispanic Research Center showed that Hispanics, who constitute more than half of immigrants entering the U.S. today, accounted for a 68 percent share in the growth of the nation’s “poverty population” between 1990 and 2000.

Via / The Washington Times and Hispanic Tips


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VivirLatino is a daily publication published by 2 Mujeres Media, dedicated to featuring all the latest politics, culture, entertainment of interest to the diverse and influential Latino and Latina community in the U.S.

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