The impact of immigration on African Americans
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Bibliographic Information
The impact of immigration on African Americans
Transaction Publishers, c2004
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Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Immigration has significant consequences for all Americans, but especially for African Americans.aThe sheer magnitude of immigration--it is the primary factor driving population growth--is so large that it directly or indirectly affects the economic, political, social, and environmental circumstances of most Americans.aBut the geographic concentration of immigrants in urban areas, and the economic concentration of immigrants in the low-wage sector of the labor market, have special consequences for African Americans since they are especially likely to live in urban areas and to be low-wage workers.These effects can be both negative and positive. Immigration has sharply increased the supply of labor into the low-wage sector of the labor market, which tends to reduce wages and employment opportunities for low-wage native workers. Employers may prefer hiring immigrants, who are perceived to be hard working and uncomplaining, to hiring African Americans. Immigrants can also increase the competition for scarce public services (especially education) on which African Americans depend. Yet immigration can also stimulate economic growth and urban revitalization, which can increase job opportunities and spread an ideology of multiculturalism. Immigration can dilute the political power of African Americans, but it can also strengthen the civil rights coalition. Immigration can benefit some groups while hurting others.This volume presents research and analysis that reflects and advances the debates about the economic and political consequences of immigration for African Americans. The contributors include Gerald Jaynes (Yale University), Vernon Briggs (Cornell University), Frank Bean and Jennifer Lee (University of California, Irvine), Robert Cherry (Brooklyn College), Manuel Pastor (University of California, Santa Cruz) and Enrique Marcelli (University of Massachusetts, Boston), Steven Camarota (Center for Immigration Studies), Frank Morris (University of Texas, Dallas), Steven Shulman (Colorado State University) and Hannes Johannsson (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency), and Lisa Catanzarite (University of California, Los Angeles).
Table of Contents
- 1: The Economic Well-Being of Black Americans: The Overarching Influence of U.S. Immigration Policies
- 2: Immigration and the Black-White Color Line in the United States
- 3: Occupational Context and Wage Competition of New Immigrant Latinos with Minorities and Whites
- 4: Immigration and the Employment of African American Workers
- 5: Do Blacks Lose When Diversity Replaces Affirmative Action?
- 6: Somewhere Over the Rainbow? African Americans, Unauthorized Mexican Immigration, and Coalition Building
- 7: Immigration and Race: What We Think We Know
by "Nielsen BookData"