This report from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace examines the impact of NAFTA after ten years.
This person is no longer with the Carnegie Endowment.
Demetrios Papademetriou’s work concentrates on U.S. objectives in the immigration and refugee areas; the migration polices of European and other advanced industrial societies; and the role of multilateral institutions in developing and coordinating collective responses to international population movements.
He is the co-founder and international chair emeritus of Metropolis: An International Forum for Research and Policy on Migration and Cities. From 1991 to 1996, Mr. Papademetriou served as chair of the migration committee of the OECD in Paris. From 1988-1992, he was director of immigration policy and research at the U.S. Department of Labor and Chair of the Secretary of Labor’s Immigration Policy Task Force.
Mr. Papademetriou has taught at American University, the University of Maryland, and Duke University, and served on the graduate faculty of the New School for Social Research. Before government service, Mr. Papademetriou was executive editor of the International Migration Review and directed the research activities of the Center for Migration Studies in New York. Mr. Papademetriou has published extensively on the immigration and refugee policies of the United States and other industrialized nations, the impact of legal and illegal immigration and the U.S. labor market, and the relationship between international migration and development.
This report from the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace examines the impact of NAFTA after ten years.
Min Zhou, Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA)presented the preliminary findings from a study she and her colleagues conducted on how social structures in immigrant communities affect the educational development of children.
Profesor Roger Waldinger, chair of the sociology department at UCLA spoke at the Carnegie Endowment for Int'l Peace on the results of his recent study for the forthcoming book, Srangers at the Gates: New Immigrants in Urban America
Briefing featuring three members of the U.S.-Mexico Migration Panel, which released a report on February 14 to U.S. President George W. Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox including proposals to change and improve the U.S.-Mexico migration relationship.
A panel of U.S. and Mexican experts propose a new bilateral framework for Mexican immigration to the U.S.
Binational Panel calls on Presidents Bush and Fox to commit their governments to begin discussion recasting our bilateral migration policy when they meet on February 16.
INS Acting Commissioner speaks about the recent activities of the INS during the transitional period and what challenges the next commissioner will face.
Much attention has been given to Japan's need to restructure its economy and its bureaucracy, but little critical analysis has addressed the necessary role of immigration policy in Japan's reform process. A series of economic, demographic, and political factors are converging to require that Japan adopt a more open policy toward immigration if it is to ensure its place as a global leader.
Part III of a conference series organized by the Self-Governance at the Borders project