Terrorists by Immigration Status and Nationality: A Risk Analysis 1975-2017
In: Cato Institute Policy Analysis, No. 866
37 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Cato Institute Policy Analysis, No. 866
SSRN
In: Cato Institute, Research and Policy Brief, No. 4, 2018
SSRN
In: Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 825
SSRN
In: Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 798
SSRN
In: The Economics of Immigration, S. 38-69
SSRN
Working paper
In: Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 719
SSRN
In: Cato policy report: publ. bimonthly by the Cato Institute, Band 35, Heft 5
ISSN: 0743-605X
In: Cato Institute Policy Analysis No. 709
SSRN
"Immigrants are going to take American jobs." "They're going to commit crimes." "They won't learn English." We've heard it all. The Most Common Arguments Against Immigration and Why They're Wrong contains the 15 most common arguments against immigration and Cato Institute scholar Alex Nowrasteh's responses to them.Immigration has been the most hotly debated public policy issue in the United States since Donald Trump entered the Republican primary in mid-2015. A new Biden Administration has an opportunity to reverse the anti-immigration actions of the Trump Administration and expand legal immigration.From economics to crime, terrorism, cultural assimilation, and the voting habits of immigrants, Nowrasteh considers the most common arguments against immigration and rejects them using sound reasoning and evidence
In: Cambridge studies in economics, choice, and society
"This chapter makes the standard economic case for free immigration. It outlines the massive global gains in output that eliminating immigration restrictions could create. It reviews the increased earnings and productivity of people based on place specific productivity, it reviews the evidence of the impact of immigraiton on jobs, wages, and fiscal deficits in destination countries."
Open Immigration: Yea by Alex NowrastehExtensive immigration restrictions are an attempt by the U.S. government to centrally manage the demographics, labor market, and culture of the United States instead of letting those facets of our society develop naturally – as they have throughout most of history. Many objections have been raised against a return to America's traditional free-immigration policy, but they are without merit and ignore immigration's tremendous benefits.In this Broadside, Alex Nowrasteh explains how a policy of open immigration is consistent with America's founding principle
In: Immigration Research and Policy Brief, Cato Institute, January 2020
SSRN
In: Cato Institute Immigration Research and Policy Brief, No. 16
SSRN
In: Cato Institute Immigration Research and Policy Brief No. 10
SSRN