Brief Immigration Trends in Metropolitan America, 1980-2007
Ajay Chaudry, Karina Fortuny, Paul A. Jargowsky
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Growth in immigration flows in the past three decades has almost tripled the size of the foreign-born population in the United States: from 14 million in 1980 to 38 million in 2007. Immigrants are still heavily concentrated in the six traditional immigrant destination states (California, New York, Texas, Florida, Illinois, and New Jersey), but immigrant numbers grew rapidly in many western, midwestern, and southeastern states. Not surprisingly, many metropolitan areas outside the traditional destination states saw high immigration growth. This brief examines immigration and poverty trends between 1980 and 2007 across the 100 metropolitan areas with the largest immigrant populations.
Research Areas Neighborhoods, cities, and metros
Tags Immigrant communities demographics and trends
Policy Centers Center on Labor, Human Services, and Population