Migration Policy Institute

MPI Home
Research Programs
National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy US Immigration European Migration Migration & Development Refugee Protection
Resources
MPI Data Hub Migration Information Source
Online Journal News & Events
Register for Updates Your Interests
Update Your Profile Media Tools US Congressional Resources
Print Friendly Version
Thu, Jan 28, 2010
9:00 AM - 10:30 AM

Promoting success on both sides of the border: Binational approaches to US immigrant integration

This event is an off-the-record discussion

RSVP NOW

When:

Thursday, January 28, 2010
9:00 to 10:30 am

Where:

MPI Conference Room
1400 16th Street, NW
Suite 300 (third floor)
Washington, DC 20036

Speakers:

Ambassador Carlos García de Alba, Executive Director, Institute for Mexicans Abroad

Laureen D. Laglagaron, MPI Policy Analyst and report author

Kathleen Newland, Director of MPI's Migrants, Migration, and Development, and Refugee Policy Programs

Aaron Matteo Terrazas, MPI Associate Policy Analyst

Moderator:

Michael Fix, MPI Senior Vice President and Director of Studies


Immigrant integration remains largely an afterthought in US immigration policy discussions and the country’s integration policies remain chronically ad hoc, underfunded, and skeletal. Yet the degree to which immigrants and their families are able to successfully integrate and achieve upward socioeconomic mobility in the United States is the ultimate test of whether immigration succeeds -- both for individual migrants as well as the country as a whole. In the absence of coherent immigrant integration policies at the federal level, the responsibility historically has fallen to families, employers, churches, non-governmental organizations, and an increasingly restive set of state and local governments. But new partners are emerging that share many of the same objectives. Increasingly, countries of origin and destination have shared interests in ensuring that immigrants and their children succeed in building their human capital and achieving socioeconomic mobility.

Among developing countries, Mexico has been a leader in advocating and actively promoting the successful integration of its diaspora. With the creation of the Institute for Mexicans Abroad (Instituto de los Mexicanos en el Exterior or IME) in 2003, the Mexican government has expanded the focus of its diplomatic offices in the United States, moving beyond traditional responsibilities such as consular protection and legal defense to promote the education, health care, financial literacy, and vocational training of Mexicans in the United States.

The MPI report, titled Protection through Integration: The Mexican Government’s Efforts to Aid Migrants in the United States, shows how Mexico’s approach to its migrants has evolved based on the belief that a better-integrated immigrant benefits both the sending and receiving countries. As the report outlines, the programs remain relatively small in terms of the number of participants and beneficiaries. But IME’s programs also represent a pioneering approach to immigrant integration by an immigrant-sending country and possibly figure among the most substantive coordinated policy initiatives to promote the integration of Mexican immigrants in the United States.

If you have any questions, please contact Lisa Dixon via email at events@migrationpolicy.org or by phone at (202) 266-1929.



Register for this event
This event is at capacity and will not accept additional guests.