CIS Report Attempts to Erase 100 Years of Data on Immigrants and Crime
Tagged: Center for Immigration Studies, crime, Immigration Policy CenterA new report from the restrictionist group, Center for Immigration Studies (CIS), Immigration and Crime: Assessing a Conflicted Issue, attempts to overturn a century’s worth of research which has demonstrated repeatedly that immigrants are less likely than the native-born to commit violent crimes or end up behind bars. The CIS report focuses much of its attention on questioning the accuracy of the 2000 Census data used in two studies in particular: The Myth of Immigrant Criminality and the Paradox of Assimilation, published by the Immigration Policy Center (IPC) in 2007, and Crime, Corrections, and California: What Does Immigration Have to Do with It?, published by the Public Policy Institute of California (PPIC) in 2008. However, CIS ignores not only the many other sources of data in these two studies, but the myriad studies from other researchers which have reached the same conclusion.
- Robert J. Sampson, Chair of the Sociology Department at Harvard University, writes in the Winter 2008 edition of the American Sociological Association’s Contexts magazine, that “immigration-even if illegal-is associated with lower crime rates in most disadvantaged urban neighborhoods.” Sampson draws in particular on his years of fieldwork in 180 Chicago neighborhoods, as well as police records, to conclude that “first-generation immigrants (those born outside the United States) were 45 percent less likely to commit violence than third-generation Americans, adjusting for individual, family, and neighborhood background.”
- Rubén G. Rumbaut, Professor of Sociology at the University of California, Irvine, and co-author of the IPC study which CIS attempts to debunk, describes the many sources of data which dispel the myth of immigrant criminality. Writing in an April 2009 report from the Police Foundation, Rumbaut observes that “both contemporary and historical studies, including official crime statistics and victimization surveys since the early 1990s, data from the last three decennial censuses, national and regional surveys in areas of immigrant concentration, and investigations carried out by major government commissions over the past century, have shown instead that immigration is associated with lower crime rates and lower incarceration rates.”
- The July 6, 2009, edition of the conservative magazine Reason features an article entitled “The El Paso Miracle ,” which notes that “by conventional wisdom, El Paso, Texas should be one of the scariest cities in America” given its poverty, its large population of less-educated immigrants (many of whom are unauthorized), and its location just across the border from the “super-violent” Mexican city Ciudad Juarez. Yet El Paso “is one of the safest big cities in America.” The article observes that this “may not be an anomaly at all. Many criminologists say El Paso isn’t safe despite its high proportion of immigrants, it’s safe because of them.”
Curation from Tomás
Filed Under: Essentials, Eye Openers, Press Releases, Research
