Trump is Wrong: New Research Links Immigration with Safer Communities

by | May 31, 2018

Home 9 Equitable Communities 9 Trump is Wrong: New Research Links Immigration with Safer Communities ( Page 17 )

Immigrants come to Wisconsin in search of economic opportunity, looking for safe communities for themselves and their families. In turn, immigrants confer a number of benefits to Wisconsin communities, including cultural and economic vibrancy, entrepreneurship, and an expanded workforce for some of the state’s most critical industries. New research from the University of Wisconsin-Madison demonstrates another benefit: undocumented immigration is associated with safer communities.

You wouldn’t know it from the harmful and virulently anti-immigrant rhetoric of President Trump, but as undocumented immigration has increased, the violent crime rate has dropped dramatically, new research shows.  A University of Wisconsin-Madison researcher who authored the study said that he did so in an attempt to help shape conversations about immigration. “This is one of those rare areas everyone is talking about, but the conversations are occurring in a vacuum of data,” study author Michael Light said. “I think public debate divorced entirely from data is problematic.”

The study showed that an increase in undocumented immigrants is associated with safer communities, in contrast to the claims of President Trump and some other politicians. A 1% increase in the proportion of the population that is undocumented is associated with 49 fewer violent crimes per 100,000 people, according to the study.

The self-selected nature of the immigrant population may be the reason that an increase in undocumented immigrants is associated with safer communities: “The idea is, immigrants are driven by pursuit of education and economic opportunities for themselves or their families,” Light said. “Moreover, migration—especially undocumented migration—requires a lot of motivation and planning. Those are characteristics that aren’t highly correlated with a high crime-prone disposition.” (Read more about the UW-Madison study.)
Other recent studies also show the extent to which President Trump’s malicious mischaracterization of undocumented immigrants misses the mark. Recent research has shown:

The lack of a connection between undocumented immigrants and crime means that raids targeting undocumented workers are focused on those who are more likely to be law-abiding. In addition, raids serve to rip children away from their parents, make immigrants wary of reporting crimes to police, and weaken civic institutions.

All Wisconsin residents—regardless of what country they were born in—want safe communities in which to live, work, and raise their families. President Trump and others who disparage immigrants, their contributions, and their desire to live in safe communities are choosing to make inflammatory, damaging statements that don’t accurately reflect life in Wisconsin communities.

Tamarine Cornelius

Tamarine Cornelius
Tamarine Cornelius

Join us to build a Wisconsin where every child and family thrives.

Recent

Early Care & Education: Supporting Wisconsin Families During Children’s Early Years

Early Care & Education: Supporting Wisconsin Families During Children’s Early Years

Regardless of race, place, or income, every child in Wisconsin deserves a strong start in life. This early foundation plays a critical role in life-long health and wellness. But systemic racism and poverty destabilizes families and communities and creates unhealthy conditions and barriers that harm children in their early development. This process of destabilization not only prevents children from having a strong start but can persist over the course of their lives.

Mental Health: A Behavioral Health System that Better Supports Counties and Schools

Mental Health: A Behavioral Health System that Better Supports Counties and Schools

Everyone in Wisconsin, regardless of what county they live in, deserves to live in a community that supports their health and wellness, including access to quality, affordable mental health and substance use disorder services. Governor Evers’ proposed budget expands access to behavioral health care, strengthens schools’ abilities to provide mental health supports to students, invests in peer support, and provides millions in funding to county behavioral health services.

Sign up for Emails

Your address helps us identify your legislators and the most relevant messages to send you.