PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Unauthorized population would soar if birthright citizenship repealed

2010-09-09
(Press-News.org) University Park, Pa. -- Repeal of birthright citizenship for the U.S.-born children of unauthorized immigrants would expand the nation's unauthorized population by at least 5 million over the next decade, according to a new report from the Migration Policy Institute.

The report's principal author is Jennifer Van Hook, professor of sociology and demographics at Penn State and non-resident fellow at the Washington, D.C.-based institute.

"While some are discussing an end to birthright citizenship as a means to reduce illegal immigration," Van Hook said, "repeal of birthright citizenship would generate a large U.S.-born unauthorized population that has the potential to grow over time, even assuming an immediate and complete halt in new illegal immigration."

The report, "The Demographic Impact of Repealing Birthright Citizenship," employs standard demographic techniques and conservative demographic assumptions to assess how the Birthright Citizenship Act of 2009 or changes to the 14th Amendment would affect the size of the unauthorized population through 2050.

The analysis reveals that the passage of the House-introduced Birthright Citizenship Act, which would deny U.S. citizenship to children born to parents who are both unauthorized immigrants, would increase the unauthorized population from its current 10.8 million to 16 million by 2050, assuming a steady-state model.

Of the estimated 4.7 million unauthorized immigrants who had been born in the United States as of 2050, 1 million would have two U.S.-born parents. The share of all U.S. children in 2050 who would be unauthorized would double, from 2 percent currently to 4 percent, under the proposed law.

Alternative scenarios that would limit citizenship beyond the proposed Birthright Citizenship Act -- for example, by denying U.S. citizenship to children who have one unauthorized immigrant parent -- would generate even higher unauthorized population estimates. The total unauthorized population would rise to 24 million in 2050 under a scenario in which citizenship is denied to U.S.-born children who have one unauthorized immigrant parent, even if the other parent were a U.S. citizen.

"What is less commonly understood in the current debate is that repeal of birthright citizenship would set in motion the creation of a self-perpetuating class of unauthorized immigrants," said the report's co-author, Michael Fix, senior vice president and director of studies at the Migration Policy Institute.

Under a scenario of denying birthright citizenship to children who have at least one authorized immigrant parent, by the third generation, 6.3 million U.S.-born people would be unauthorized despite having two U.S-born parents.

"This perpetuation of hereditary disadvantage based on the legal status of one's ancestors would be unprecedented in U.S. immigration law," Fix said.

INFORMATION:

The Migration Policy Institute is an independent, non-partisan think tank dedicated to analysis of the movement of people worldwide. Its report on birthright citizenship is available at www.migrationpolicy.org/pubs/BirthrightInsight-2010.pdf.

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Satellite data reveal seasonal pollution changes over India

Satellite data reveal seasonal pollution changes over India
2010-09-09
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Armed with a decade's worth of satellite data, University of Illinois atmospheric scientists have documented some surprising trends in aerosol pollution concentration, distribution and composition over the Indian subcontinent. In addition to environmental impact, aerosol pollution, or tiny particles suspended in the air, can be detrimental to human health by causing a range of respiratory problems. Aerosols can come from natural sources, such as dust and pollen carried on the wind, but the most hazardous aerosols are generated by human activity – soot ...

Why the biological clock? Penn study says aging reduces centromere cohesion, disrupts reproduction

Why the biological clock? Penn study says aging reduces centromere cohesion, disrupts reproduction
2010-09-09
PHILADELPHIA –- University of Pennsylvania biologists studying human reproduction have identified what is likely the major contributing factor to the maternal age-associated increase in aneuploidy, the term for an abnormal number of chromosomes during reproductive cell division. Using naturally aging mouse models, researchers showed that this basic fact of reproductive life is most likely caused by weakened chromosome cohesion. Older oocytes, or egg cells, have dramatically reduced amounts of a protein, REC8, that is essential for chromosomes to segregate correctly ...

Cash hoarding nothing new for businesses, scholar says

2010-09-09
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The U.S. economy is experiencing anemic growth, yet businesses are sitting on a mountain of cash worth nearly $2 trillion, according to Federal Reserve estimates. But this trend is nothing new for firms, who have been steadily increasing their cash holdings over the past three decades, a University of Illinois business professor says. Finance professor Heitor Almeida says the fact that businesses are stuffing corporate piggy banks with spare cash for the proverbial "rainy day" is unrelated to the belt-tightening brought about by the continuing financial ...

Twins are intriguing research subjects for Notre Dame biometircs researchers

2010-09-09
Each year in August, the aptly named town of Twinsburg, Ohio, is the site of the largest official gathering of twins in the world. Open to all multiples — identical and fraternal twins, triplets and quads from newborns to octogenarians — the weekend's events include food, live entertainment, a golf tournament, and a twins' parade. The event also has become an important site for field research by Kevin Bowyer and Patrick Flynn of the University of Notre Dame's Department of Computer Science and Engineering. Flynn has a twin sister, making this research especially relevant ...

New model to measure disease burden of postmenopausal osteoporosis

2010-09-09
An article just published in the scientific journal 'Osteoporosis International' introduces a validated new model that can be used to describe the current and future burden of postmenopausal osteoporosis in different national settings. The model, published by researchers from the UK on behalf of the International Osteoporosis Foundation's Committee of Scientific Advisors, was developed and validated using Swedish data. It can be used to forecast the incidence and prevalence of fractures not only by age and calendar year, but also by BMD category. It provides a high degree ...

Report issued today examines improving long-term climate forecasts

2010-09-09
MIAMI — September 8, 2010 -- Operational forecasting centers produce climate predictions that provide input for important decisions regarding water management, agriculture, and energy. "Assessment of Intraseasonal to Interannual Climate Prediction and Predictability", a new report from the National Research Council/National Academy of Sciences, examines current capabilities for making climate predictions -- such as seasonal hurricane or longer-term drought forecasts -- and identifies opportunities for improvement. The report finds that operational forecast centers could ...

Parents report a widely prescribed antibiotic is effective for fragile X treatment

2010-09-09
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) — One of the antibiotics most commonly prescribed to treat adolescent acne can increase attention spans and communication and decrease anxiety in patients with fragile X syndrome, the most common inherited cause of mental impairment, according to a new survey study that is the first published on parents' reports of their children's responses to treatment with the medication. Led by researchers at the UC Davis MIND Institute, the study examined parents' observations of their children's responses to minocycline — not the efficacy of treating patients ...

Insulin may reduce several inflammatory factors induced by bacterial infection

2010-09-09
BUFFALO, N.Y. -- Treating intensive care patients who develop life-threatening bacterial infections, or septicemia, with insulin potentially could reduce their chances of succumbing to the infection, if results of a new preliminary study can be replicated in a larger study. A paper published online ahead of print in Diabetes Care reports that insulin lowered the amount of inflammation and oxidative stress in study participants who had been injected with a common bacteria, or endotoxin, known as LPS (lipopolysaccharide). The study was conducted by University at Buffalo ...

First discovery of bilirubin in a flower announced

First discovery of bilirubin in a flower announced
2010-09-09
MIAMI, FL—A research team led by Cary Pirone from the Department of Biological Sciences at Florida International University has identified bilirubin in the popular Bird of Paradise plant. The breakthrough study, published in the September 2010 issue of the American Society for Horticultural Science's journal HortScience, provides new insights into color production in this iconic tropical plant. Previously thought to be an "animal-only" pigment, bilirubin is best known as the yellowish hue associated with bruises and jaundice sufferers. In 2009 the FIU researchers found ...

Consumers will pay more for goods they can touch, Caltech researchers say

2010-09-09
PASADENA, Calif.—We've all heard the predictions: e-commerce is going to be the death of traditional commerce; online shopping spells the end of the neighborhood brick-and-mortar store. While it's true that online commerce has had an impact on all types of retail stores, it's not time to bring out the wrecking ball quite yet, says a team of researchers from the California Institute of Technology (Caltech). Their investigations into how subjects assign value to consumer goods—and how those values depend on the way in which those goods are presented—are being published ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study shows blood conservation technique reduces odds of transfusion by 27% during heart surgery

Mapping an entire subcontinent for sustainable development

Complete brain activity map revealed for the first time

Children with sickle cell disease face higher risk of dental issues, yet many don’t receive needed care

First brain-wide map of decision-making charted in mice

Mechanical forces drive evolutionary change

Safe, practical underground carbon storage could reduce warming by only 0.7°C – almost 10 times less than previously thought

Chinese scientists reveal hidden extinction crisis in native flora

Patient reports aren’t anecdotal—they’re valuable data

Mount Sinai study discovers potential link between stress and type 2 diabetes

Hurricane Sandy linked to lasting heart disease risk in elderly

Precision genetic target provides hope for Barth syndrome treatment

Colorless solar windows: Transforming architecture into clean power plants

SwRI-proposed mission could encounter and explore a future interstellar comet like 3I/ATLAS up close

Obtaining prefrontal cortex biopsies during deep brain stimulation adds no risk to procedure

New research finds 62% of AFib patients were unaware of the condition before diagnosis

69 schools awarded wellness grants to support healthier communities nationwide

Transparent Reporting of Observational Studies Emulating a Target Trial—The TARGET statement

Nonregistration, discontinuation, and nonpublication of randomized trials

Improving the reporting on health equity in observational research (STROBE-Equity)

Bacteria that ‘shine a light’ on microplastic pollution

SeoulTech develop hybrid polymer-CNT electrodes for safer brain-machine interfaces

From symptoms to biology: Neurodegeneration in paraventricular thalamus in bipolar disorder

From longevity to cancer: Understanding the dual nature of polyamines

Faraday Institution commits a further £9M to battery research to deliver commercial impact

Study: Evaluating chatbot accuracy in the fast-changing blood cancer field

A ‘wasteful’ plant process makes a key prenatal vitamin. Climate change may reduce it.

Targeted cell removal offers treatment hope

Here we glow: New organic liquid provides efficient phosphorescence

Countries’ carbon budget math is broken

[Press-News.org] Unauthorized population would soar if birthright citizenship repealed