The Impoverishing Effects of Federal Immigration Policy in California: Psychological, Social, and Economic

Migration research culster

Event Date

Location
UC Center Sacramento | 1130 K St LL22, Sacramento, CA 95814

The Trump administration has proposed several changes that will affect federal immigration policies and their enforcement  such as the repeal of DACA, a decrease in the number of  H1B visas and  more aggressive deportations of undocumented. In this conference we present research analyzing how those changes can affect individual, society and the economy in California, focusing on undocumented, on workers and on children and families. A Panel will then discuss specific consequences and the action that local agents are taking in response to those federal policies. 

Registration ends 1/26 at 12PM.

Agenda

8:30 AM

Conference Registration

9:00 AM

Opening Remarks

9:05-9:40 AM

Latino Children’s Access to Education Services

Jacob Hibel, Associate Professor, Department of Sociology, UC Davis

9:40-10:15 AM

 

When Local Enforcement Helps ICE: The Economic Effects

Sarah Bohn, Research Fellow, Public Policy Institute of California

Paper

10:15-10:35 AM

Break

10:35-11:10 AM

 

DACA and Psychological Wellbeing

Caitlin Patler, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, UC Davis

Paper

11:10-11:45 AM

 

Deportation During the Great Depression

Giovanni Peri, Professor and Chair, Department of Economics, UC Davis

Paper

11:45 AM-12:15 PM

Lunch

12:15 -1:00 PM

 

California and the Recent Immigration Policy Proposals

Moderator: Giovanni Peri

Kevin Johnson, Dean, UC Davis School of Law

Irena Asmundson, Chief Economist, California Department of Finance

Liliana Ferrer, Consul General of Mexico in Sacramento

1:00 PM

Adjourn

Sponsors:  Migration Research Cluster, UC Center Sacramento, Center for Poverty Research, and Institute of Social Sciences 

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