Immigration News Services

The Center for Immigration Studies operates four free e-mail information services (listservs) on immigration news. The more than 7,000 subscribers include most of those involved in the field from around the world, including academics, policymakers, ICE and other agency personnel, journalists, attorneys, activists from all sides, and others. The services cover developments both in the United States and abroad.

To subscribe to a list, go to http://www.cis.org/mail_login.html and follow the instructions there. If you have any questions or problems, feel free to contact the Center at center@cis.org.
For those who don't want more e-mail, buttons on the left side of the Center's home page also link to top news stories, updated each business day.

CISNEWS

  • Two full article, daily roundups respectively covering U.S. and overseas news.
  • Three weekly roundups of immigration-related opinions, readings, and events.
  • Occasional press releases on CIS studies and panels.
  • One monthly update regarding new work from CIS.

This Week in Immigration

  • One weekly roundup of all U.S. news, Overseas News, and Opinions compiled in a shortened format.
  • Two weekly roundups of immigration-related readings and events.
  • Occasional press releases on CIS studies and panels.
  • One monthly update regarding new work from CIS.

Announce

  • Occasional press releases on CIS studies and panels.
  • One monthly update regarding new work from CIS.

Digest

  • One daily roundup including everything sent in the last 24 hours.

IMPORTANT: Like all large e-mail lists, our services are occasionally mis-identified as spam by Internet service providers, preventing subscribers from getting messages. To avoid this, you should look into adding <center@cis.org> to the list of approved addresses in your e-mail program, since that is the address that messages will be sent from. This is sometimes called a "whitelist" (as opposed to a blacklist) and indicates that messages from that address should not be filtered out or diverted to a spam folder. In Outlook, for instance, there is an "Exceptions List," while AOL offers a "Sender Filter" within the "Mail and Spam Controls." Also, you might need to alert your e-mail provider to add center@cis.org to their own whitelist, in case CISNEWS messages are blocked by their servers.