Analyzing the New Visa Overstay Report

DHS has identified over 700,000 overstays in 2017

This report provides new analysis of the DHS annual Entry/Exit Data Overstay Report, which identified over 700,000 overstayers in 2017, a decline of about five percent from 2016. The analysis shows that certain categories of visitors, particularly student and exchange visitors and guestworkers, have especially high overstay rates.

Event: A Conversation with Rep. Lamar Smith

Three Decades of Immigration Leadership

Representative Lamar Smith (R-Texas) was featured in an Immigration Newsmaker conversation hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies on  September 5 at the National Press Club.

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There Are No Jobs Americans Won’t Do

A detailed look at immigrants (legal and illegal) and natives across occupations

This report provides new analysis refuting the myth that there are jobs that Americans simply won't do. The report analyzes the 474 separate occupations defined by the Department of Commerce and finds that there are none completely dominated by immigrants (legal or illegal) and none in which illegal immigrants constitute the majority of the workforce.

Event: A Conversation with Francis Cissna

USCIS Director on legal immigration challenges

Francis Cissna, Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), was featured in an Immigration Newsmaker conversation hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies on August 15 at the National Press Club. 

Video

Transcript

Terrorist Infiltration Threat at the Southwest Border

The national security gap in America’s immigration enforcement debate

This report examines the potential terrorist threat posed by the smuggling of special interest aliens (SIAs) – people coming from a country identified as having possible or established links to terrorism.

Visa Overstay Report
Visa Overstay Report
A Conversation with Rep. Lamar Smith
A Conversation with Rep. Lamar Smith
There Are No Jobs Americans Won’t Do
There Are No Jobs Americans Won’t Do
Event: A Conversation with Francis Cissna
Event: A Conversation with Francis Cissna
Terrorist Infiltration Border Threat
Terrorist Infiltration Border Threat

DHS has identified over 700,000 overstays in 2017

This report provides new analysis of the DHS annual Entry/Exit Data Overstay Report, which identified over 700,000 overstayers in 2017, a decline of about five percent from 2016. The analysis shows that certain categories of visitors, particularly student and exchange visitors and guestworkers, have especially high overstay rates.

Three Decades of Immigration Leadership

Representative Lamar Smith (R-Texas) was featured in an Immigration Newsmaker conversation hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies on  September 5 at the National Press Club.

View Video

View Transcript

A detailed look at immigrants (legal and illegal) and natives across occupations

This report provides new analysis refuting the myth that there are jobs that Americans simply won't do. The report analyzes the 474 separate occupations defined by the Department of Commerce and finds that there are none completely dominated by immigrants (legal or illegal) and none in which illegal immigrants constitute the majority of the workforce.

USCIS Director on legal immigration challenges

Francis Cissna, Director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), was featured in an Immigration Newsmaker conversation hosted by the Center for Immigration Studies on August 15 at the National Press Club. 

Video

Transcript

The national security gap in America’s immigration enforcement debate

This report examines the potential terrorist threat posed by the smuggling of special interest aliens (SIAs) – people coming from a country identified as having possible or established links to terrorism.

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A Refreshingly Stiff Civil Penalty in the Vermont EB-5 Case

The vast majority of civil penalties in the immigration business are deportations and other removals of illegal aliens.

But sometimes citizens and green card holders receive civil penalties because of immigration-related violations. (These are all quite different from criminal penalties, as they often the results of plea agreements — and never involve jail time.)