Editors' Note: Read our primer on Supreme Court oral arguments about Arizona's strict anti-illegal immigration law and read how immigration policy already affects people in the state.
To get a better sense of the legislative push that most famously included Arizona's draconian SB 1070, Mother Jones built a database of the 164 (often curiously similar) anti-immigration laws passed by state legislatures in 2010 and 2011. As you can see below, the number of restrictive laws jumped last year, when five states—Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina, and Utah—passed Arizona-style bills. For a state-by-state look at these copycat laws, undocumented population demographics, political contributions from the private-prison industry, and more, scroll down the page. See our sources and dive into the full database below.
Just how wide-ranging has the recent anti-immigration push been? Only seven states (Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, New Hampshire, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Wyoming) failed to pass anti-immigration laws in 2010 and 2011. Most states passed anywhere from 1 to 6 such bills—on everything from driver's license eligibility to the mandatory use of E-Verify—while a few (Arizona, Utah, and Virginia) passed 11 or more. Including Arizona's SB 1070, 36 states considered wide-ranging anti-immigration laws; 6 were successful.
Correction: The original version of the in-state tuition map showed Wisconsin as granting in-state tuition to undocumented immigrants. In fact, the Wisconsin Legislature passed a bill last year repealing that earlier legislation. The map has been changed to reflect this.
Original Article
Source: Mother Jones
Author: Ian Gordon and Tasneem Raja
To get a better sense of the legislative push that most famously included Arizona's draconian SB 1070, Mother Jones built a database of the 164 (often curiously similar) anti-immigration laws passed by state legislatures in 2010 and 2011. As you can see below, the number of restrictive laws jumped last year, when five states—Alabama, Georgia, Indiana, South Carolina, and Utah—passed Arizona-style bills. For a state-by-state look at these copycat laws, undocumented population demographics, political contributions from the private-prison industry, and more, scroll down the page. See our sources and dive into the full database below.
Just how wide-ranging has the recent anti-immigration push been? Only seven states (Alaska, Connecticut, Delaware, New Hampshire, Ohio, Wisconsin, and Wyoming) failed to pass anti-immigration laws in 2010 and 2011. Most states passed anywhere from 1 to 6 such bills—on everything from driver's license eligibility to the mandatory use of E-Verify—while a few (Arizona, Utah, and Virginia) passed 11 or more. Including Arizona's SB 1070, 36 states considered wide-ranging anti-immigration laws; 6 were successful.
Anti-Immigration Laws Passed, 2010-11
Laws That Copycat Arizona's SB 1070
TRACKING THE UNDOCUMENTED
It's no surprise that many undocumented immigrants reside in border
states like Arizona, California, and Texas (or in longtime immigrant
havens like Florida and New York). But 2010 estimates by the Pew Hispanic Center
show that immigrants account for more than 2 percent of the population
in the Pacific Northwest, parts of the Plains, and several Southern
states. And as many as 25 states—most in the middle of the country—may
have seen increases in the percentage of undocumented immigrants from
2005 to 2010.*
Estimated Percentage of the Population That Is Undocumented, 2010
Estimated Change in the Percentage That Is Undocumented, 2005-10
STANDING TO BENEFIT?
Back in 2010, NPR reported
on the financial stake private-prison companies like Corrections
Corporation of America and the GEO Group have in the passage of state
immigration laws. As former GEO Group president Wayne Calabrese said on a
May 2010 call with investors, "Those people coming across the border
and getting caught are going to have to be detained, and that for me, at
least I think, there's going to be enhanced opportunities for what we
do."
2010 Campaign Contributions from Private-Prison Industry
STILL DREAMING
Not all immigration-related laws at the state level are restrictive. Fourteen states, including Texas under Gov. Rick Perry,
have passed so-called state DREAM acts, legislation allowing
undocumented students to qualify for in-state college tuition. Five have
passed bills to keep such students from qualifying (effectively
charging them out-of-state or even international tuition), including
Arizona and three other states (Georgia, Indiana, and South Carolina)
that passed SB 1070-like laws.
Laws on In-State Tuition for Undocumented Students
Correction: The original version of the in-state tuition map showed Wisconsin as granting in-state tuition to undocumented immigrants. In fact, the Wisconsin Legislature passed a bill last year repealing that earlier legislation. The map has been changed to reflect this.
*It is important to note that the Pew Hispanic Center study
expressed its data in ranges, which reflect significant margins of
error. When comparing 2007 and 2010 data, for example, coauthor D'Vera
Cohn said that researchers could say with confidence that the numbers
went up or down only in four states (and two other groups of states).
Source: Mother Jones
Author: Ian Gordon and Tasneem Raja
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