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Graph and download economic data for Employment Level - Foreign Born (LNU02073395) from Jan 2007 to Feb 2025 about foreign, household survey, employment, and USA.
From January to December 2024, around 66,000 migrants arrived in Italy by sea. Between 2014 and 2024, the number of migrants setting foot in the country peaked in 2016 at 181,000 individuals, whereas in 2019 only 11,400 people were rescued from the sea. In fact, stricter immigration policies were enacted between 2018 and 2019 by the right-wing and populist government supported by the League and the Five-Star Movement. Among the most frequent countries of origin declared upon arrivals in 2024, Bangladesh and Syria ranked in the first places. About 13,800 were Bangladeshi citizens, while around 12,500 immigrants came from Syria. Asylum seekers and minors among the migrants In 2023, the largest number of asylum applicants in Italy were from Bangladesh. In fact, 23,450 requests were recorded as of December 2023, while 18,300 applicants were from Egypt, the second most common nationality among asylum seekers. In recent years, many unaccompanied minors reached the Italian coasts. In 2024, 8,043 children migrated without their parents into the country. Contrasting opinions and distorted perceptions According to the data published by Ipsos, a part of Italians tend to overestimate the size of the immigrated population. The results of this survey uncovered the presence of distorted perceptions in 2018: people thought that about 28 percent of the Italian population was not born in Italy, whereas the actual percentage was around ten. Furthermore, the public opinion on migration was controversial. In the same year, roughly half of the population perceived migrants as a risk for the Italian economy. On the other hand, 18 percent of Italians believed that migration could be a resource for the country.
MOIA contracts with a vendor to provide in-person interpreters at certain City-sponsored events across the City. MOIA primarily provides this service to offices within the Mayor’s Office (on occasion MOIA may provide the service to other City entities beyond the Mayor’s Office, depending on MOIA’s capacity). Each line represents a unique instance for which MOIA provided in-person interpretation services by a Mayor’s Office/Non Mayor’s Office and includes the type of interpretation, target language, event name, event time, and location. Where a single event requires multiple target languages and types of interpretation, a unique row of data exists for each unique combination, but refers back to a single request (RequestID).
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Graph and download economic data for Civilian Labor Force Level - Foreign Born (LNU01073395) from Jan 2007 to Feb 2025 about foreign, civilian, 16 years +, labor force, labor, household survey, and USA.
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Graph and download economic data for Labor Force Participation Rate - Foreign Born (LNU01373395) from Jan 2007 to Feb 2025 about foreign, participation, civilian, 16 years +, labor force, labor, household survey, rate, and USA.
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About The Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA) Database contains information on the presence, status and some outcomes of refugee claimants who entered Canada and were subject to the Safe Third Country Agreement with the United States of America at the Canada-US border from 2017 to 2024. Although these data were largely publicly-available, they were neither centralised, cleaned nor easily accessible for analysis by researchers and publics alike. Based on work by a group of researchers at Haven: the Asylum Lab supported by University of Toronto's Scholars in Residence Program (2024), we present centralised and processed data for the first time. Summary Implemented in 2004, the STCA places restrictions on the ability of refugee claimants to seek political asylum in Canada based on how they enter the country. Specifically, it mandates that those who arrive in the United States of America prior to entering Canada must seek refugee status there. One exception to the original STCA was that those who entered "irregularly" (i.e., between ports of entry); essentially, by entering Canada in this way, they could continue to seek refugee status as per international law. In 2023, the Governments of Canada and the USA implemented an additional protocol to the STCA which prevented this mode of seeking asylum unless the person in question made an unauthorised crossing and stayed in Canada for at least two weeks. In sum, the STCA has had major impacts on both the flows of and means by which refugee claimants trying to get to Canada to apply for political asylum do so. Despite the importance of the STCA on refugee flows into Canada, as well as pending legal actions related to it (e.g., a Supreme Court challenge), there are few data sources attempting to measure its empirical effects. On this basis, we present The STCA Database to fill this gap. This data drop will be the first of a series related to the STCA as a whole. Data Structure We structured the into a series of tables sourced from their original webpages. For more information on the data's structure and methodology for its construction (including to how to reproduce it), see "README.md". Tables are organised into corresponding comma-separated value (CSV) files, which can be opened in a variety of software packages, including but not limited to spreadsheet editors. Data Sources These data were sourced from the following agencies in the Government of Canada. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) provided numbers on interceptions of asylum-seekers between ports of entry at th Canada-US border by geography and time. The Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) gave numbers cases of asylum seekers processed in their officers by mode of entry (i.e., on land, air, sea or inland), geography and time. Finally, The Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (IRB) held numbers on outcomes of refugee claims made by those who made "irregular border crossings" by selected countries and time; we compared these outcomes to all refugee claims made with IRB, which were also provided with these data. Some data were sourced using earlier versions of tables provided by the organisations listed above. To access them, we used the Internet Archive's WayBack Machine. This was necessary because some data which were previously available were later removed. If you use these data, please cite the original source at Aptana, Nagata, Gomes, Noelle, Li, Yifan, Sien, Sunny & Mio Sugiura. (2024). The Safe Third Country Agreement (STCA) Database. Borealis, https://doi.org/10.5683/SP3/WBSFPE. Should you have any comments, questions or requested edits or extensions to The STCA Database, please contact Haven at kira.williams@utoronto.ca.
As of mid-2024, Iran was the largest refugee-hosting country in the world. According to data available by the UN Refugee Agency UNHCR, there were nearly 3.8 million refugees in Iran. Turkey was second with more than 3.1 million. The data refers to the total number of refugees in a given country, not considering the date of their application for asylum or the date of their flight.
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Graph and download economic data for Employed full time: Earnings of foreign born as percent of native born: Wage and salary workers: Less than a High School diploma: 25 years and over (LEU0257371900A) from 2005 to 2024 about native born, foreign, secondary schooling, secondary, full-time, 25 years +, salaries, workers, earnings, education, wages, percent, employment, and USA.
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https://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Employment Level - Foreign Born (LNU02073395) from Jan 2007 to Feb 2025 about foreign, household survey, employment, and USA.