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Graph and download economic data for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for New York County, NY (DISCONTINUED) (NETMIGNACS036061) from 2009 to 2020 about New York County, NY; migration; flow; New York; NY; Net; 5-year; and population.
The share of immigrants in the construction industry in New York City in 2019 was more than twice as high as the share in the United States as a whole. That year, 35 percent of construction workers in New York State were immigrants, while that figure raised to 53 percent in New York City.
These data are part of NACJD's Fast Track Release and are distributed as they were received from the data depositor. The files have been zipped by NACJD for release, but not checked or processed except for the removal of direct identifiers. Users should refer to the accompanying readme file for a brief description of the files available with this collection and consult the investigator(s) if further information is needed. The main aim of this research is to study the criminal mobility of ethnic-based organized crime groups. The project examines whether organized crime groups are able to move abroad easily and to reproduce their territorial control in a foreign country, or whether these groups, and/or individual members, start a life of crime only after their arrival in the new territories, potentially as a result of social exclusion, economic strain, culture conflict and labeling. More specifically, the aim is to examine the criminal mobility of ethnic Albanian organized crime groups involved in a range of criminal markets and operating in and around New York City, area and to study the relevance of the importation/alien conspiracy model versus the deprivation model of organized crime in relation to Albanian organized crime. There are several analytical dimensions in this study: (1) reasons for going abroad; (2) the nature of the presence abroad; (3) level of support from ethnic constituencies in the new territories; (4) importance of cultural codes; (5) organizational structure; (6) selection of criminal activities; (7) economic incentives and political infiltration. This study utilizes a mixed-methods approach with a sequential exploratory design, in which qualitative data and documents are collected and analyzed first, followed by quantitative data. Demographic variables in this collection include age, gender, birth place, immigration status, nationality, ethnicity, education, religion, and employment status. Two main data sources were employed: (1) court documents, including indictments and court transcripts related to select organized crime cases (84 court documents on 29 groups, 254 offenders); (2) in-depth, face-to-face interviews with 9 ethnic Albanian offenders currently serving prison sentences in U.S. Federal Prisons for organized crime related activities, and with 79 adult ethnic Albanian immigrants in New York, including common people, undocumented migrants, offenders, and people with good knowledge of Albanian organized crime modus operandi. Sampling for these data were conducted in five phases, the first of which involved researchers examining court documents and identifying members of 29 major ethnic Albanian organized crime groups operating in the New York area between 1975 and 2013 who were or had served sentences in the U.S. Federal Prisons for organized crime related activities. In phase two researchers conducted eight in-depth interviews with law enforcement experts working in New York or New Jersey. Phase three involved interviews with members of the Albanian diaspora and filed observations from an ethnographic study. Researchers utilized snowball and respondent driven (RDS) recruitment methods to create the sample for the diaspora dataset. The self-reported criteria for recruitment to participate in the diaspora interviews were: (1) age 18 or over; (2) of ethnic Albanian origin (foreign-born or 1st/2nd generation); and (3) living in NYC area for at least 1 year. They also visited neighborhoods identified as high concentrations of ethnic Albanian individuals and conducted an ethnographic study to locate the target population. In phase four, data for the cultural advisors able to help with the project data was collected. In the fifth and final phase, researchers gathered data for the second wave of the diaspora data, and conducted interviews with offenders with ethnic Albanian immigrants with knowledge of the organized crime situation in New York City area. Researchers also approached about twenty organized crime figures currently serving a prison sentence, and were able to conduct 9 in-depth interviews.
The dynamism of migration strengthens NYC and has contributed to the City’s growth in population to an all-time high of 8,537,673 in 2016. These charts show the number of people who moved to or left NYC during each time period, according to census survey data.
The visualization was made with the popular dataviz library d3.js, and adds interactivity, showing trend lines for each cohort when the user interacts with the chart.
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Graph and download economic data for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Monroe County, NY (DISCONTINUED) (NETMIGNACS036055) from 2009 to 2020 about Monroe County, NY; Rochester; migration; flow; NY; Net; 5-year; and population.
As of 2023, 27.3 percent of California's population were born in a country other than the United States. New Jersey, New York, Florida, and Nevada rounded out the top five states with the largest population of foreign born residents in that year. For the country as a whole, 14.3 percent of residents were foreign born.
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Graph and download economic data for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Columbia County, NY (DISCONTINUED) (NETMIGNACS036021) from 2009 to 2020 about Columbia County, NY; migration; flow; NY; Net; 5-year; and population.
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Graph and download economic data for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Erie County, NY (DISCONTINUED) (NETMIGNACS036029) from 2009 to 2020 about Erie County, NY; Buffalo; migration; flow; NY; Net; 5-year; and population.
As of October 2019, about 40.5 thousand Japanese residents lived in the New York metropolitan area. In the same year, the United States was country with the highest number of Japanese residents by far. The statistic, which is based on the information gathered by Japanese diplomatic missions abroad, does not include descendants of Japanese emigrants (nikkeijin) who do not hold Japanese citizenship. People with multiple citizenship are counted.
The purpose of this study was to examine interrelated issues surrounding the use of the criminal justice system by immigrant victims and to identify ways to improve the criminal justice response to immigrants' needs and problems. Two cities, New York City and Philadelphia, were selected for intensive investigation of victimization of immigrants. In each of these cities, three immigrant communities in a neighborhood were chosen for participation. In New York's Jackson Heights area, Colombians, Dominicans, and Indians were the ethnic groups studied. In Philadelphia's Logan section, Vietnamese, Cambodians, and Koreans were surveyed. In all, 87 Jackson Heights victims were interviewed and 26 Philadelphia victims were interviewed. The victim survey questions addressed can be broadly divided into two categories: issues pertaining to crime reporting and involvement with the court system by immigrant victims. Variables include type of crime, respondent's role in the incident, relationship to the perpetrator, whether the incident was reported to police, and who reported the incident. Respondents were also asked whether they were asked to go to court, whether they understood what the people in court said to them, whether they understood what was happening in their case, and, if victimized again, whether they would report the incident to the police.
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According to figures recently released by the United States Census, America’s largest metro areas are currently gaining population at impressive rates. The growth in these areas is in fact driving much of the population growth across the nation. Upon closer examination of the data, this growth is the result of two very different migrations – one coming from the location choices of Americans themselves, the other shaped by where new immigrants from outside the United States are heading.While many metro areas are attracting a net-inflow of migrants from other parts of the country, in several of the largest metros – New York, Los Angeles., and Miami, especially – there is actually a net outflow of Americans to the rest of the country. Immigration is driving population growth in these places. Sunbelt metros like Houston, Dallas, and Phoenix, and knowledge hubs like Austin, Seattle, San Francisco, and the District of Columbia are gaining much more from domestic migration.This map charts overall or net migration – a combination of domestic and international migration. Most large metros, those with at least a million residents, had more people coming in than leaving. The metros with the highest levels of population growth due to migration are a mix of knowledge-based economies and Sunbelt metros, including Houston, Dallas, Miami, District of Columbia, San Francisco, Seattle, and Austin. Eleven large metros, nearly all in or near the Rustbelt, had a net outflow of migrants, including Chicago, Detroit, Memphis, Philadelphia, and Saint Louis.Source: Atlantic Cities
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Historical chart and dataset showing U.S. net migration by year from 1960 to 2024.
The Infoshare Community Information Service is a sophisticated tool that lets planners, community activists, teachers, students, researchers, and ordinary citizens view and analyze a vast array of community and regional data.
InfoShare Online ("http://www.infoshare.org/") includes over 3000 neighborhood definitions and 50,000 items of data gathered during the last decade on the neighborhoods. These include population statistics, immigration trends, socio-economic indicators, birth and death data, hospitalizations, local trade data, and much more.
Except for Demographic Projections, which are purchased from commercial firms, all data files are obtained from City, State and Federal government agencies. Community Studies of New York is in constant contact with these agencies, and incorporates the newest data as soon as it becomes available. Community Studies obtains from its data sources data at the smallest geographic area at which it is publicly available, usually census tracts and zip codes. To provide data for other geographies, a series of overlap factors has been developed which convert this small-scale data into these larger areas of special interest. Such overlap factors are based upon the distribution of residential housing, when this is available. In that case, the overlaps approximate as closely as possible the distribution of the population by residence. Where this residential data is not available, geographic overlap factors are derived using standard geographic mapping overlays.
In 2023, it is estimated that about *********** Brazilians lived in the United States. Of these, ************** lived in the state of New York. The largest community resided in the state of Florida, with around ******* Brazilians divided between the consulate in Miami and the consulate in Orlando. Brazil-U.S. relations In 2024, Brazil and the United States celebrated 200 years of diplomatic relations. The countries cooperate in various sectors, but the economy stands out the most, as the United States was Brazil's second-largest trading partner in 2023. The trade between these countries amounted to over ** billion dollars in that year. This proximity between the countries is appreciated by Brazilian citizens, who mostly have a good image of the North American country. U.S. Brazilian imports The value of U.S. imports of Brazilian origin has grown in recent decades. After a decline in 2020, the value of imports increased by around ***** billion U.S. dollars and, in 2023, the United States imported approximately 39 billion U.S. dollars’ worth of Brazilian goods. This was the highest level of Brazilian imports since 1985. Furthermore, the imports of agricultural products from Brazil totaled nearly *** billion U.S. dollars in 2023.
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Graph and download economic data for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Kings County, NY (DISCONTINUED) (NETMIGNACS036047) from 2009 to 2020 about Kings County, NY; migration; flow; New York; NY; Net; 5-year; and population.
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The present data handbook is intended to provide the adequate data material for research on the aspects of international migration. In 1924, the Committee on the Scientific Aspects of Human Migration of the Social Science Research Council gave a suggestion for this collection. The implementation of the statistical study was entrusted to the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) in New York (Prof. Dr. Willcox), which was supported by the Migration Department of the International Labor Office (ILO) Dr. Ferenczi) in Geneva, Switzerland. The data handbook of Ferenczi and Willcox goes beyond the compilation of known, available migration statistics of the individual countries. In addition to the published official statistics, many materials in various archives have been reviewed, assessed, and edited.
The researchers collected national statistics with the aim of compiling them in international tables. The particular challenge of this work lay in the fact that the further the data goes back into the past, the incomplete nature of the national migration statistics increases. For each country, the number of emigrants was gathered according to the country of destination or country of immigration indicated by them. In addition, for each country the immigrants were recorded according to the country of their departure. This should provide an overview of the migration flows for each country.
Intercontinental migration is the focus of this study. However, the continental migration within Europe and other parts of the world has also been gathered by the authors. The material for the statistics was obtained by correspondence with the ILO (International Labour Organization) and its member states (The United Nations,the cooperation with the statistical offices of the respective nations and by reviewing of materials in various archives.
These tables of this study contain the compilation of international migration statistics.
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Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Richmond County, NY was -2961.00000 Persons in January of 2020, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Richmond County, NY reached a record high of -2319.00000 in January of 2009 and a record low of -6125.00000 in January of 2015. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Richmond County, NY - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on June of 2025.
This dataset provides the data used to identify where potentially hazardous and contaminated sites could interact with future salt marsh migration corridors. The dataset collates data from: 1) the University of Rhode Island, 2) Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management, 3) U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 4) U.S. Census Bureau , and 5) RIGIS. This dataset is associated with the following publication: Burman, E., K. Mulvaney, N. Merrill, M. Bradley, and C. Wigand. Hazardous and contaminated sites within salt marsh migration corridors in Rhode Island, USA.. JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT. Elsevier Science Ltd, New York, NY, USA, 331(1 April 2023): 117218, (2023).
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Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Cortland County, NY was 954.00000 Persons in January of 2020, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Cortland County, NY reached a record high of 1994.00000 in January of 2009 and a record low of -726.00000 in January of 2014. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Cortland County, NY - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on July of 2025.
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Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Bronx County, NY was -22601.00000 Persons in January of 2020, according to the United States Federal Reserve. Historically, Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Bronx County, NY reached a record high of 2162.00000 in January of 2010 and a record low of -23103.00000 in January of 2018. Trading Economics provides the current actual value, an historical data chart and related indicators for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for Bronx County, NY - last updated from the United States Federal Reserve on June of 2025.
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Graph and download economic data for Net County-to-County Migration Flow (5-year estimate) for New York County, NY (DISCONTINUED) (NETMIGNACS036061) from 2009 to 2020 about New York County, NY; migration; flow; New York; NY; Net; 5-year; and population.