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Statistical Portraits of the Hispanic and Foreign-Born Populations, 2006The most up-to-date compilation of statistics on the Latino and foreign-born populations in the United States is based on the Pew Hispanic Center's tabulations of the 2006 American Community Survey. Email UpdatesEnter your email address below to receive email updates about new research and upcoming events from the Pew Hispanic Center. Please indicate if you are a member of the news media. |
Other PublicationsThe Research Challenges Posed by the Latino Experience
La Primavera Latina de 2006
41.9 Million and Counting: A Statistical View of Hispanics at Mid-Decade
A Developing Identity: Hispanics in the United States
Rethinking Global Migration: New Realities, New Opportunities, New Challenges
Does Immigration Hurt U.S. Workers?
The Optimistic Immigrant: Among Latinos, the Recently Arrived Have the Most Hope for the Future
Attitudes Toward Immigration in Red and Blue: In Democratic-dominated counties, foreign-born residents are more populous - and more welcome
Attitudes Toward Immigration: In Black and White
Attitudes Toward Immigration: In the Pulpit and the Pew
The Complex Tapestry of the Undocumented: Day Laborers Are Just One Strand
Tan Cerca y Tan Lejos: El Voto en el Exterior
Leaving the Newcomers Behind
Latino Power? It Will Take Time for the Population Boom to Translate
Managing Mestizaje: The Ethics of a Cosmopolitan Era
Who Are "We" Now? The Collateral Damage to Immigration
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Copyright © 2008 Pew Hispanic Center
The Pew Hispanic Center is a project of the Pew Research Center, a nonpartisan "fact tank" that provides information on the issues, attitudes and trends shaping America and the world. It is supported by The Pew Charitable Trusts. 1615 L Street, NW Suite 700 Washington, DC 20036-5610 p 202.419.3600 f 202.419.3608 |