Stay in touch
HISTORIA MAGISTRA
  • Home
  • Resources
    • Class Handbook
    • Principles for Engagement
    • Conducting Research >
      • Research Topics
    • Critical Reading
    • Making Notes
    • MLA Guide
    • Independent Studies
    • Symposiums
    • Socratic Seminars
    • Questions
  • Ethnic Studies 7
    • Identity
    • Hegemony
    • Power
    • Our Community
    • Invention of Race
    • Gender Equity
    • Intersectionality
    • Critical Race Theory
    • Immigration
  • Ethnic Studies 8
    • Colonial Latin America
    • Imperialism
    • Industry/Environment/ Human Rights
    • World War One >
      • Colonization of Africa >
        • Race to Colonize
        • African Resistance
        • A Time of Change
        • Domination by Indirect Rule
        • Rule by Assimilation
      • Segregated Military
      • Black Women and WWI
      • Fighting in Europe
    • Upstanders and Bystanders in WWII >
      • Black Americans in the War
      • LatinX Americans in the War
      • Native Americans in the War
      • World War II Webquest >
        • WWII Background
        • Government Types
        • Tactics
        • Battles
        • Holocaust
        • Japanese Interment
        • Home Front
        • Effect of War
        • Propaganda
        • Atomic Age
      • The War in Africa
      • The War in Asia
      • WWII Propoganda
  • About
    • Mr. Mike's Resume
    • Contact
    • Previous Projects
  • Egypt
    • Research Links
  • Greece
    • Research Links
  • Religion
    • Spiritual Autobiography
    • Doorway
    • Gallery
  • Medieval
    • Africa
    • Bushido
    • Chivalry
    • Silk Road Resources
    • Middle Ages Web Quest >
      • Task One
      • Task Two
      • Task Three
      • Titles and Roles
  • The Roaring Twenties

research

  • Ryszard Cholewinski, “Protecting Migrant Workers in a Globalized World,” Migration Policy Institute, March 1, 2005

  • Jeanne Batalova, “H-1B Temporary Skilled Worker Program,” Migration Policy Institute, Oct. 7, 2010

  • The Criminalization of Immigration in the United States, published in July, 2015, is a fact filled report published by the American Immigration Council. It concludes that "immigrants are less likely to be criminals than the native-born." You can read the full report byclicking here.

  • This article by The Center for Migration Studies published in 2015, explains how the number of approximately 11 million unauthorized persons living in the U.S. was arrived at. Click here.

  • The Center for Migration Studies recently conducted a study that estimates the number of undocumented migrants in the U.S. It also studied trends in migrant populations and found that the number of undocumented persons living in the U.S. has dropped. You can read the full report, published in 2016, by clicking here.

  • U.S. border apprehensions of Families and Unaccompanied Children Jump Dramatically, Pew Research Center, May, 2016.

  • Origins and Destinations of the World’s Migrants, from 1990-2013, Pew Research Global Attitudes Project, May, 2016.

  • Births Outside of Marriage Decline for Immigrant Women, Pew Research Center, October, 2016.

  • Luka Klimaviciute, “To Stay or Not To Stay: The Calculus for International STEM Students in the United States,” Migration Policy Institute, January 4, 2017

  • "Frequently Requested Statistics on Immigrants and Immigration in the United States,” Migration Policy Institute, March 8, 2017.
mikemcguig@gmail.com