Nearly a Thousand Expected to Attend NIIC

With NIIC only a few days away, our excitement is mounting to welcome you and nearly a thousand other policy makers, advocates, educators, business leaders, culture shapers, community stakeholders, and more from across the country! The eighth annual National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC) - New American Dreams: Advancing Opportunity, Equality & Justice – aims to connect a bold and dynamic immigrant integration movement with a broader group of stakeholders to drive inclusion and impact together.

NIIC-Tour-Flatbush-Facebook

If you haven't registered yet, there's still time, just click here!

From exciting new developments in adult education and access to health care, new approaches in integration in emerging immigrant communities, and efforts to empower New Americans to apply for citizenship, NIIC participants will discuss and tackle some of the key integration issues facing U.S immigrant communities today. Participants will together shape a platform for New Americans ahead of the 2016 Presidential elections.

Here's some other friends and colleagues who are sharing our excitement:

Expressing support for this year’s NIIC, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said, “New York City has long been a city of immigrants – and that’s integral to what makes our city so great. We are committed to ensuring that all immigrants can build the lives they and their families deserve. It is an honor to welcome the NIIC and its attendees, policy-makers, and advocates from across the country who are working to create the same welcoming environments in their communities.”

NPNA Executive Director Joshua Hoyt said, "New York is a shining example to the nation of how to thrive through immigrant integration. We are thrilled to bring the National Immigrant Integration Conference to New York, where the Statute of Liberty has welcomed generations of New Americans. During this period, when even presidential candidates believe that they can score cheap political points by attacking immigrants and their children, our nation has much to learn from New York. The National Immigrant Integration Conference builds on our proud tradition as the most successful experiment in world history in building a nation of immigrants."

Steven Choi, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition said, “We are so proud to be this year’s local co-host for the largest and most ambitious integration conference ever. With 11 tracks and dozens of panels on issues as broad as financial inclusion, healthcare, global migration, voter engagement, efforts in citizenship outreach, worker justice, and more, this year’s NIIC will highlight immigrant integration issues that we must prioritize and tackle in 2016 and beyond. It is also of great significance that this year’s conference takes place in what has historically been a key port of entry for immigrants and is the cultural and financial capital of the country. What happens in New York City influences major policy, cultural, political, and business trends across the country and we plan on using the wealth of expertise, discussion, and policy recommendations made at this year’s NIIC as a roadmap for our work moving forward.”

Javier H. Valdés, co-executive director of Make the Road New York said, “With the national political conversation about immigration turning ugly again, it’s more critical than ever that we convene this conference to discuss affirmative approaches to immigrant integration. And there’s no better place to hold these discussions than our beloved city of immigrants, where we have taken important strides forward, including the creation of municipal IDs for all New Yorkers, the nation’s first public defender program for immigrants facing deportation, and the removal of Immigration and Customs Enforcement from Rikers Island.”

Eva Millona, executive director of MIRA said, "As the co-chair of NPNA and the executive director of the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, I’ve been attending NIIC for 7 years. As a former co-host of NIIC, we at MIRA are proud to be part of a conference that is truly changing the way we shape policy around immigrant integration across the United States. We look forward to this year's conference in Brooklyn and helping to jumpstart a vision for immigrant integration that we will carry on into the New Year."

Commissioner Nisha Agarwal of New York City’s Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) said, “As a member of the NIIC’s steering committee, we envision the NIIC to be a forum in which to support new Americans’ dreams. I loved attending the NIIC as an immigration advocate, and I am honored to now welcome the NIIC to New York City as Commissioner of MOIA. The NIIC provides an invaluable opportunity for us to hear from participants across the country, and we look forward to sharing New York City’s work to ensure immigrant families can access all of NYC, including our work on the nation’s largest municipal ID program.”

NIIC 2015 Schedule is Here!

NIIC-Dynamic Cutting-edge strategies. Creative approaches. Thought leaders shaping the national conversation. Practitioners innovating on the ground everyday. Culture makers and business leaders, advocates and researchers working together. That – and more – is what you can expect at the National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC 2015).

Through over 50 sessions at NIIC – in our 11 issue-area tracks, 5 main-stage plenaries and numerous affinity group caucuses – NIIC 2015 will create the space to ask hard questions, build relationships and craft lasting solutions together. We are excited to share this first glance at our schedule for the conference, which kicks off Sunday, December 13 at 1:30pm and runs through Tuesday, December 15 at 5pm. Here are just a few of the NIIC 2015 session highlights to look for: •    Immigrants and the Public Imagination •    Empowering Immigrant and Refugee Entrepreneurs through Financial Inclusion •    Global Integration Trends and the Path Forward •    Making the Law Work for Us: Winning Pro-Worker, Pro-Immigrant Policies and Building the Power to Make Them Real •    Intersections Across Our Citizenship Movement •    Educational & Workforce Success for DACA Youth: Making the Most of DACA’s Promise •    Decriminalize. Decarcerate. Liberate. •    New Voices in the Media: Non-English and Ethnic Media •    Shifting Cultures on Immigration, Identity and Race

But that’s not all. NIIC 2015 will also feature opportunities to learn about New York City’s diverse immigrant communities through NIIC <3 Immigrant NY Tours across the city, film screenings, a conference Expo and more.

The stakes to build a truly welcoming, just and comprehensive approach to immigrant integration couldn’t be higher at this pivotal moment. Be part of the conversation that will shape the policies, platforms and practices America needs.

Join us. Register for NIIC 2015 now.

We can’t wait to meet up with you in December,

Tara Raghuveer, Policy & Advocacy Director, NPNA Cynthia Greenberg, Conference Coordinator, NIIC 2015

P.S. For those registering 10 or more from a group, we are pleased to offer a special discount on registration costs. More info is here! Register your group now!

Charting the Path for Immigrant Advocacy, Together

"Serious moments call for serious discussion, and action," writes Javier H. Valdés, Co-Executive Director of Make the Road New York in the Gotham Gazette. "And so it is with immigration politics in our country today." Make the Road New York, which builds the power of Latino communities to achieve dignity and justice, is a key partner on the NIIC 2015 Executive Committee along with the Massachusetts Immigrant and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, joining co-hosts NPNA and the New York Immigration Coalition.

The movement for immigrant justice, he writes, has clearly won tremendous victories in the last few years, including President Obama's deferred action for DREAMers and for parents of US citizen children and others. Yet, we continue to confront intransigence in Congress and barriers to immigration relief. Valdés highlights NIIC 2015 an opportunity to come together to create a path forward:

This moment clearly calls for action—as immigrant groups around the country continue to mobilize against anti-immigrant forces and advocate for sensible federal, state, and local immigration policies—but it also warrants reflection.

And that's why, this year, New Yorkers should be extremely excited that we're hosting the National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC, niic2015.org), the country's largest annual conference dedicated to discussions about how to enrich our democracy by welcoming and integrating immigrants into the fabric of our nation.

To be held at the Brooklyn Marriott from December 13-15, the NIIC will bring together immigrant leaders and advocates from across the country to discuss issues like the implementation of deferred action, how to ensure workplace justice and workforce development for immigrant workers, and where our immigrant rights struggles fit into the landscape of other social movements.

And there's simply no better place to have these discussions than New York. With roughly 3 million immigrants representing nearly 40 percent of the population, 45 percent of the workforce, and 49 percent of small business owners, immigrants are an essential part of our city's dynamic economy and culture.

To read his entire article, visit here. For a Spanish version, see Forjando juntos el camino para los inmigrantes in El Diario.

Then register for NIIC 2015 and book your hotel today!

NIIC's People Power – Join us in December!

Bold immigrant rights advocates. Innovative business leaders. Visionary community leaders. Dedicated service providers. Forward-thinking policy makers. Expert researchers, students and educators. Imaginative artists and culture shapers. All attend the National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC) — and they help to shape it. Each year, experts from across the country volunteer their time to build a NIIC program that explores the most relevant questions in immigrant integration. This year is no exception, and we are lucky that many of the foremost leaders in the field are working to create the most dynamic NIIC yet.

NIIC 2015 will feature 11 Tracks, each conceived and spearheaded by a team of these leaders.

Nisha Agarwal, Commissioner of the New York City Mayor’s Office of ImmigranNisha Agarwalt Affairs (MOIA), is a co-lead of NIIC 2015’s Citizenship Track. Her new American dream “is for families – including immigrant families – to be able to realize their full potential in this country, regardless of immigration status, language, or the opportunities available to them in their country of origin.”

Jeremy CarterJeremy Carter, Chief Development Officer at the National Association for Latino Community Asset Builders (NALCAB), co-leads NIIC 2015’s Business and Financial Empowerment Track. Jeremy tells us that his new American dream “is that our nation becomes a place where my children can take pride in their rich Guatemalan heritage without fear of being labeled by others as anything less than American.”

Read about the rest of NIIC 2015’s fantastic Track Co-Leads here.

Registration is open, and our Early Bird rates are available through September 15.

We will be building our new American dreams in December. Register now and join us!

 

 

2014 National Immigrant Integration Conference Media Coverage

Over 50 reporters from local and national media joined us for the National Immigrant Integration Conference 2014 in Los Angeles in December 2014 to cover issues and interview national leaders and advocates around immigrant integration. Key topics included President Obama's historic executive immigration action and the Cities for Citizenship initiative, while key speakers included U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director Leon Rodriguez and Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti. Coverage of the conference included mainstream media - such as New York Times, Los Angeles Times, and the Associated Press - and ethnic media, including Spanish and Chinese languages. Brad Wong, Immigration Conference to Focus on 'Inclusive Democracy', Equal Voice, December 9, 2014

Tanvi Misra, On Immigration, Gaining the Support of Mayors Is as Much Practical as It Is Political, The Atlantic CityLab, December 9, 2014

Roxana Kopetman, Free events in L.A., O.C. promise help on Obama's immigration plan, Orange County Register, December 11, 2014

Kate Linthicum, Immigrants Get Advice on Eligibility for Delayed-Deportation Programs, Los Angeles Times, December 14, 2014

Julia Preston, Undocumented Immigrants Line Up For Door Opened by Obama, New York Times, December 14, 2014

Thousands Attend Immigration Forum on Obama's Reform Plan, CBS Los Angeles, December 14, 2014

Indocumentados asisten a jornada sobre alivio migratorio en EU, La Cronica, December 14, 2014

Isaias Alvarado, Realizan foro migratorio en Los Ángeles, La Opinion, December 14, 2014

Undocumented Immigrants to Receive Consulting Services, China News, December 14, 2014

Preguntas y respuestas sobre acción ejecutiva, Univision, December 14, 2014

Roxana Kopetman, Forum aims to provide answers, offers details on new immigration regulations, Orange County Register, December 14, 2014

Josie Huang, Seeking help on White House orders, immigrants come to workshop in L.A., KPCC 89.3, December 14, 2014

Jorge Luis Macías, Informados, La Opinion, December 15, 2014

Joey Garrison, Nashville joins coalition to promote citizenship for immigrants, The Tennessean, December 15, 2014

Jaime Garcia, Detalles sobre la campaña de inscripción a la acción ejecutiva migratoria, Univision, December 15, 2014

USCIS Dedicated to Promoting Citizenship and Providing Resources, The Beacon: Official Blog of USCIS, December 15, 2014

Cities Launch Effort to Increase Citizenship, Equal Voice News, December 16, 2014

Hollywood A-Listers to Open 2014 National Immigrant Integration Conference

For a look at the great Hollywood talent who will open NIIC 2014, take a look at this release we shared with local and national media: HOLLYWOOD A-LISTERS OPEN THE 2014 NATIONAL IMMIGRANT INTEGRATION CONFERENCE

Hollywood talent lend their support for the President’s executive action at the open plenary at the National Immigrant Integration Conference.  Topics include: on and off screen immigration stories, representations of immigrants and immigration in film and television, and shared perspectives on policy.  Plenary is followed by workshops featuring additional artists and Food Chains film screening.

Los Angeles, CA – The National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC) welcomes Hollywood stars to support immigrants across the nation through the sharing of personal and professional stories of the intersection of immigration and the film and television industry.  Opening plenary is on Sunday, December 14, followed by film screening and producer talk back of the just theatrically released documentary Food Chains (from executive producers of Food Inc and Fast Food Nation) on Monday, December 15.

Events are to be held at the Los Angeles Convention Center, but registration is necessary.

Learn more about the opening Hollywood featured plenary here

Learn more about the Food Chains film screening here

Panelists include 2014 Academy award nominee Barkhad Abdi (Captain Phillips), writer and executive producer of the monster hit Under the Same Moon Ligiah Villalobos, Netflix Orange is the New Black and the CW’s Jane the Virgin starlet Diane Guerrero, and Lifetime’s fastest growing scripted series Devious Maids star Ana Ortiz.  Opening plenary is to be moderated by NPR powerhouse Maria Hinojosa and Film screening panel by Ambulante mobile film screening director Christine Davila. For information on each of the speakers, please see attached, all are available for interviews.

Press credentials are required. Please contact Charlie McAteer at CMcAteer@weareoneamerica.org for credentialing at least one day before the start of the conference.  A press packet and a green room will be available for credential members of the press.

WHAT:  7th Annual National Immigrant Integration Conference

WHEN:  Sunday, December 14, 2014  2 p.m. & Monday, December 15, 2014 at 3:30 p.m.

WHERE: Los Angeles Convention Center, South Hall

WHO:  The National Partnership for New Americans (NPNA) and the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA)

A complete Conference program can be accessed here.

NIIC 2014 Press Packets

In an effort to save trees and provide materials to our friends in the media ahead of the conference, we've compiled our NIIC 2014 Press Packet below. If you have any questions about NIIC programming, scheduling interviews, or conference logistics, please contact Jorge-Mario Cabrera, CHIRLA, jmcabrera@chirla.org, (562) 243-5559, or Charlie McAteer, cmcateer@weareoneamerica.org, (917) 696-1321. Charlie can arrange media credentials for you or your team.

NIIC 2014 Press Packet

Advisory: Administrative Relief Forum

Advisory: NIIC Offers First Opportunity for National Gathering Since Obama’s Immigration Order

Advisory: 11 Major U.S. Cities to Join Citizenship Initiative at National Event

Advisory: Hollywood A-Listers Open the 2014 National Immigrant Integration Conference

Artist Bios [PDF] for Plenary 1: Representations of Immigrants in Film and Media (December 14, 2014 2pm)

Advisory: More than a Dozen Workshops and Sessions to Highlight Need to Educate and Serve Millions on Administrative Relief Program

NIIC 2014 Schedule

Resource: National Partnership for New Americans (NPNA website)

Resource: Cities for Citizenship (C4C website)

Resource: Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA)

Thank you for your interest in NIIC 2014!

Also join the conversation on Twitter @npnewamericans and #NIIC.

 

11 Major U.S. Cities to Join Citizenship Initiative at National Event

For a great overview of our action-packed Monday morning plenary at NIIC 2014, here’s what we shared with local and national media: Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, USCIS Director Leon Rodriguez, and Felicia Escobar, immigration advisor to the President, will join 1,000 advocates and experts at immigrant integration conference this month in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles, CA – On Monday, December 15, 2014, 11 major U.S. cities will join Cities for Citizenship, an initiative launched by Los Angeles, New York City, and Chicago in partnership with Citi, the founding corporate partner, in September which aims to increase citizenship among eligible U.S. permanent residents to forge more inclusive and economically robust cities.

Leading officials from Atlanta, Baltimore, Boston, Chattanooga, Denver, Milwaukee, Nashville, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. will announce their active participation in this growing initiative at a special event during the National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC 2014). This action-packed plenary will feature a welcome from Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, a keynote address by Leon Rodriguez, director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), and Cities for Citizenship leaders, including Bob Annibale, Global Director of Citi Community Development and Microfinance. Tefere Gebre, Executive Vice President of the AFL-CIO, another initiative partner, is speaking in a panel later that day focused on building partnerships in support of immigrant integration.

Cities for Citizenship participants will also be competing in Integration Idol, where high level officials from five cities – Chicago, New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, and Philadelphia – will highlight the innovative ways they are working to attract immigrants, integrate them fully, and become globally competitive leaders.

A recent report, Citizenship: A Wise Investment for Cities, by the Center for Popular Democracy, National Partnership for New Americans and the Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration (CSII) at USC Dornsife, found profound economic benefits to naturalization.

At the launch event, Cities for Citizenship leaders will also announce the addition of several partner organizations with strong ties to immigrant communities across the country, including AFL-CIO, the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials (NALEO), the National Federation of Credit Development Unions, SEIU 32BJ, and Welcoming America.

WHAT: Cities for Citizenship Plenary at the National Immigrant Integration Conference

WHEN: 8:00am-10:00am, Monday, December 15

WHERE: Los Angeles Convention Center 1201 S Figueroa St, Los Angeles, CA 90015

WHO: Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti Angelica Salas, Executive Director, CHIRLA Manuel Pastor, Co-Director, University of Southern California's Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration Nisha Agarwal, New York City, Commissioner of the NYC Mayor's Office of Immigrant Affairs Tonantzin Carmona, Chicago, Director of the Office of New Americans Linda Lopez, Los Angeles, Chief of the Office of Immigrant Affairs, LA Mayor's Office at City of Los Angeles Monica Fuentes, Atlanta, Chief Service Officer at City of Atlanta Jennifer Rodriguez, ‎Executive Director, Mayor's Office of Immigrant and Multicultural Affairs at City of Philadelphia Joshua Hoyt, Executive Director, NPNA Shena Elrington, Director of Immigrant Rights & Racial Justice Policy, Center for Popular Democracy Bob Annibale, Global Director, Citi Community Development and Microfinance Leon Rodriguez, Director, USCIS Gustavo Torres, Executive Director, CASA de Maryland

NIIC Offers First Opportunity for National Gathering Since Obama's Immigration Order

For a great overview of NIIC 2014, here's what we shared with local and national media: Los Angeles, CA – The National Partnership for New Americans (NPNA) and the Los Angeles Host Organization, Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of Los Angeles (CHIRLA), welcome hundreds of delegates from throughout the United States to the 7th Annual National Immigrant Integration Conference (NIIC 2014) December 14-16, 2014 to be held at the Los Angeles Convention Center.

The three-day Conference kicks off Sunday, December 14, with one of the largest educational forums in the country to date on Administrative Relief. The Forum highlights President Obama’s Executive Action announcement of November 20, 2014, and includes expert opinions on who qualifies, how to prepare, and how to avoid fraudulent offers. The forum is free of charge and doors open at 8:30 a.m.  although seating is limited to 10,000 people.

U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Director Leon Rodriguez, who will be coordinating administrative relief efforts for the President, is providing the keynote address during a Monday morning plenary. Five plenaries feature nationally-recognized immigrant rights movement, labor, faith, education, and business leaders such as María Elena Durazo, Dr. Manuel Pastor, and Oscar Chacón, elected officials including the mayors of various major urban centers, and academy award journalists and actors such as Barkhad Abdi, Maria Hinojosa, and Roger Guenveur Smith.  For information on each of the plenary speakers, visit http://www.integrationconference.org/schedule/.

Nationally-renowned figures in the immigration reform movement such as Ben Monterroso at Mi Familia Vota, Saket Soni at the National Guestworker Alliance, and Steven Choi at the New York Immigration Coalition will present workshops during one of the more than 30 sessions under 9 tracks available for Conference goers.  Track titles include: Strengthening our Nation through Workforce Development, From Naturalization to Citizenship, Education Services and Systems, Affordable Care Act from an Immigrant’s Perspective, and the Economic Opportunity, Inclusion and Stability, amongst others.

For visitors to Los Angeles, the Conference plans a series of gatherings called “Caucuses” for Sunday, December 14.  In addition, four “Discover Los Angeles Tours” will offer Conference goers the opportunity to visit East Los Angeles, South Los Angeles, Chinatown, and Little Ethiopia in ways they have likely never seen them before.

Conference goers can also enjoy the New Americans Exposition open every day from 8 am to 6 pm Sunday, 10 a.m. to 6p.m. Monday, and 10 am – 3 pm Tuesday. The Expo is a collection of some of LA’s best small businesses, non-profit organizations, and vendors serving the immigrant community.

Press credentials are required. Please contact Charlie McAteer at cmcateer@weareoneamerica.org for credentialing at least one day before the start of the conference. A press packet and a green room will be available for credential members of the press.

Hope you can join us this weekend!

Immigration Reform to Strengthen the U.S. Economy

The immigration reform debate has changed in meaningful ways over the past decade as business leaders and other unique allies have entered the fold. This panel, featuring representatives from national and statewide business-oriented coalitions, will highlight the successful strategies and arguments they have employed in recent years to broaden support for reform across the political spectrum. Hear how the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, FWD.us, the Partnership for a New American Economy, and the Illinois Business Immigration Coalition have moved the needle with business and conservative leaders and see how they view the landscape for state and federal action going forward. Speakers: 

  • Randel K. Johnson, U.S. Chamber of Commerce
  • Todd Schulte, FWD.us
  • Dan Wallace, Partnership for a New American Economy
  • Rebecca Shi, Illinois Business Immigration Coalition

Special Free Screening: Food Chains

The movie Food Chains focuses on an intrepid and highly lauded group of tomato pickers from Southern Florida – the Coalition of Immokalee Workers or CIW – who are revolutionizing farm labor. Their story is one of hope and promise for the triumph of morality over corporate greed – to ensure a dignified life for farm workers and a more humane, transparent food chain. Screening will be followed up by a Q & A sessions with the filmmakers and Ambulante. Moderator:  Christine Davila, Director, Ambulante California

[av_video src='https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lqZLrXVAde4' format='16-9' width='16' height='9']

Picking the Story That’s Right for You: A Horticulture+Strategy Workshop

Designed for anyone who is currently -- or considering -- embedding art and culture into their immigrant integration strategies, this hands-on workshop offers a fresh metaphoric framework for planning, implementation and assessment. Find out why Welcoming America chapters used the multimedia platform Immigrant Nation as a Rake, and test your new analytical skills: is Jose Antonio Vargas’ film DOCUMENTED a Trellis... or a Trowel? Hosted by Active Voice.

Speakers: 

  • Ellen Schneider, Director Active Voice Lab
  • Special guests to be announced

Moving a National Agenda: Making the Most of Administrative Relief

After several failed legislative attempts at comprehensive reform and decades of advocacy from immigrant communities and their allies, now is a decisive moment. The NIIC will be the largest gathering of leaders in the immigrant rights movement, government, faith, business, academia, and policy since the President announced his executive action. There is a desperate need for coordination, public education, and outreach to prevent chaos and fraud. As a field we must focus on making administrative relief workable, generous, and catalytic. Speakers:

  • Felicia Escobar, Special Assistant to the President of the United States for Immigration Policy
  • Larry Kleinman, Immigration Reform Implementation Senior Advisor, FIRM
  • Drew Westen, Professor, Department of Psychology, Emory University
  • Jeanne Atkinson, Executive Director, Catholic Legal Immigration Network, Inc. (CLINIC)
  • Charles Kamasaki, Executive Vice President, National Council of La Raza (NCLR)

Full Citizenship in America

This plenary will bring together intellectual leaders, policymakers, and practitioners working to promote a path to citizenship. The panel of leaders will consider the evolving nature of citizenship in America and internationally. This plenary will consider how citizenship can extend beyond conceptualizations of birth and naturalization. Keynote:

  • Gov. Jerry Brown, Governor, California (invited)

Moderator:

  • Eric Liu, Founder and CEO, Citizenship University

Panelists: 

  • Norma Wong, Instructor, Institute for Zen Studies
  • Roger Smith, Actor, Director, Writer
  • Lavinia Limón, President & Chief Executive Officer of the U.S. Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI)

The Campaign to Make Citizenship Affordable: Victories, Next Steps, and Original Research

Dr. Manuel Pastor will present his original research on who is eligible to naturalize. Participants will discuss next steps in the campaign to make citizenship affordable. Panelists:

  • Dr. Manuel Pastor, Professor, USC, Dornslife-Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration, Co-Director USC CSII Program
  • Felicia Escobar, Special Assistant to the President of the United States for Immigration Policy
  • Joshua Hoyt, Executive Director, National Partnership for New Americans
  • Jacki Esposito, Policy Analyst, National Partnership for New Americans

Integration Idol: Municipal Leadership in Immigration

This plenary will celebrate the launch of the second phase of Cities for Citizenship (C4C) and will feature an exciting “American Idol” style competition to anoint the nation’s most welcoming and immigrant friendly city. Commissioners of immigrant affairs from several major cities will compete for your vote! [av_heading heading='Integration Idol' tag='h4' style='' size='' subheading_active='' subheading_size='15' padding='10' color='' custom_font=''][/av_heading]

Host:

  • Dr. Manuel Pastor, Professor, University of Southern California, Dornslife-Center for the Study of Immigrant Integration, Co-Director USC CSII Program

Contestants: 

  • Shena Erlington, Director of Immigrant Rights and Racial Justice, Center for Popular Democracy
  • Linda Lopez, Chief, Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, Los Angeles
  • Nisha Agarwal, Commissioner, Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs, Chicago
  • Tonanzin Carmona, Director, Mayor’s Office of New Americans, Chicago
  • Monica Fuentes, Chief Service Officer, Atlanta
  • Jennifer Rodriguez, Executive Director, Mayor’s Office of Immigrant and Multicultural Affairs, Philadelphia

[av_heading heading='Launch of Cities for Citizenship Phase Two:' tag='h4' style='' size='' subheading_active='' subheading_size='15' padding='10' color='' custom_font=''][/av_heading]

  • Bob Annibale, Global Director, Citi Community Development and Microfinance
  • Eric Garcetti, Mayor of Los Angeles

Keynote:

  • Leon Rodriguez, Director, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Dept. of Homeland Security

Vote for America's Most Welcoming City!

At NIIC 2014, we invite you to meet the contestants for the most immigrant-friendly city in America and participate in the first-ever Integration Idol! This is your chance to learn more about immigrant integration policies and practices from traditional immigrant destination heavyweights such as New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, and to find out what smaller - but strongly committed communities - like Atlanta and Philadelphia are doing to attract immigrants to their cities, integrate them fully, engage the receiving community, and become globally competitive leaders.

The contestants in Integration Idol – high level officials from these five cities – will compete for your votes during in a lively, fast-paced session that is sure to entertain.

Emcee:University of Southern California

Idol contestants:

Make sure you’re registered for NIIC 2014, then plan which sessions and tracks you’ll participate in, which Discover L.A. Tour you want to join, and get excited about all you’ll learn and explore at the event.

 

 

Building Partnerships for Immigrant Integration

Once unlikely partners, labor and business have joined forces to promote integration through a variety of innovative programs. Similarly, philanthropic involvement has evolved within the field. This plenary will explore existing partnerships and consider future collaborations between labor, business, and philanthropy. Moderator: Speakers:

  • Tefere Gebre, Executive VP, AFL-CIO
  • Alma Salazar, VP of Education and Workforce Development for the LA Chamber (invited)
  • Trang Tu, Program Officer, Gates Philanthropy
  • Maria Elena Durazo, LA County Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO
  • Randy Johnson, US Chamber of Commerce

Representation of Immigrants in Film and Media

While Hollywood has made significant in-roads with presenting more diversity on and off the screen, the roles for immigrants are still limited and often reinforce stereotypes. Participants will speak about how they have balanced the demands of the Hollywood while staying true to their own identities. Moderator:

  • Maria Hinojosa -- Maria Hinojosa is an award-winning news anchor and reporter who covers America’s untold stories and highlights today’s critical issues. As the anchor and Executive Producer of NPR’s only Latino news and culture show Latino USA, and anchor and Executive Producer for the upcoming PBS show America By The Numbers with Maria Hinojosa, she has informed millions about the changing cultural and political landscape in America and abroad.

    Hinojosa has received numerous awards for her work including: four Emmys; the 2012 John Chancellor Award for Excellence in Journalism; Robert F. Kennedy Award for Reporting on the Disadvantaged; the Studs Terkel Community Media Award; the Edward R. Murrow Award from the Overseas Press Club for best documentary for her ground-breaking “Child Brides: Stolen Lives.”

Speakers:

  • Barkhad Abdi, Actor, Academy Award Nominee -- Barkhad Abdi is a Somali American actor and director. He made his debut in the 2013 film Captain Phillips, for which he received various film award nominations, including Best Actor in a Supporting Role at the Academy Awards, Golden Globes and BAFTA, the latter of which he went on to win.
  • Ana Ortiz, Actress, Singer -- The talented and vibrant Ana Ortiz broke out as Hilda Suarez in ABC’s hit comedy Ugly Betty, earning both ALMA and Imagen Awards for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal as Betty’s sassy older sister. Along with her personal recognition, the show has been honored with a 2007 Emmy for Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series, two Golden Globe awards including Best Television Series – Comedy or Musical, and another 39 wins and 66 nominations. In addition to her recurring roles on ABC’s acclaimed Boston Legal as A.D.A Holly Raines and as Anna in the FX series set in wartime Iraq Over There, Ortiz also starred in the ABC series A.U.S.A and Kristin. She is currently starring in Marc Cherry’s hit show for Lifetime entitled Devious Maids.
  • Ligiah Villalobos, Writer, Actor, Producer -- Ligiah Villalobos is the Writer and Executive Producer of the independent feature film Under the Same Moon, (La Misma Luna), released by Fox Searchlight and The Weinstein Company. The film was an Official Selection at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and became the highest sale for a Spanish-language film in the history of Sundance. Made for under $2M, the film has earned over $23M worldwide.
  • Diane Guerrero, Actress -- Diane Guerrero is a Colombian-American actress best known for the role of Maritza Ramos on the Netflix web series Orange is the New Black. Guerrero was born in New Jersey to Colombian parents and raised in Boston. As the only American-born child in her family, she remained in America when the rest of her family was deported back to Colombia when she was 14. She has had an interest in acting since a young age and took advantage of free opportunities in the neighborhood or at school. Then she attended Boston Arts Academy, which is a performing arts high school, where she was in the music department. At age 24, she decided to pursue a career in acting. Guerrero’s life experience compels her to advocate for immigration reform and is an influence that she draws upon in her acting.

Learning From Our Allies in Other Social Justice Struggles

Communities across the United States are waging struggles for social justice on a variety of fronts, including police accountability, racial justice, fair working conditions, and LGBTQ equality. The recent grand jury decision in Ferguson, Missouri, and the fights to increase the minimum wage and win marriage equality in various locations indicate the work that remains unfinished and must continue. This timely panel will bring together leaders from these battles to discuss the lessons they have learned, and how these lessons can be applied to the fight for immigrant rights and immigration reform. Speakers:

  • Linda Sarsour, Executive Director, Arab American Association of New York -- Linda Sarsour is a civil rights activist, seasoned community organizer and social media maverick. She is the National Advocacy Director at the National Network for Arab American Communities and Executive Director of the Arab American Association of New York. Linda has been at the forefront of the campaign to end the NYPD's unwarranted surveillance of the American Muslim community, discriminatory law enforcement practices like stop and frisk and broken windows policing impacting communities of color in New York City. She is the co-founder of Muslims for Ferguson which was born days after the tragic murder of Michael Brown to mobilize American Muslims to support the incredible people of Ferguson and their pursuit for justice. She is a board member of the New York Immigration Coalition. Linda is well known for her intentional work to build coalitions across communities and issues. She has been recognized as a ""Champion of Change"" by the White House, received the Shirley Chisholm Women of Distinction Award from the New York City Council, and named American Muslim of the Year by America's largest Muslim civil rights organization amongst many other accolades. She is a Palestinian Muslim American born and raised in Brooklyn, New York.
  • Marco Antonio Quiroga, National Field Officer, Immigration Equality Action Fund
  • Tia Oso, Black Alliance for Just Immigration
  • Shuya Ohno, Campaign Director, Advancement Project -- Shuya Ohno joined Advancement Project in 2014 to lead the Right To Vote Initiative as its Campaign Director. With over twelve years of experience in electoral and advocacy campaigns at the local, state, and national levels, Shuya brings commitment to movement building that integrates organizing and communications to build capacity at the grassroots to bring campaigns to scale.Before joining Advancement Project, Shuya worked at the Center for Community Change and the National Immigration Forum on national immigrant rights campaigns. Over the past ten years, Shuya traveled to over 27 states, working closely with dozens of grassroots and statewide community organizations. In 2007 and 2008, Shuya played a pivotal role in responding to crises in New Bedford, MA and Postville, IA respectively when communities of color suffered devastation from major immigration raids. In Arizona in 2010, Shuya worked with local organizations and communities of color to train over 100 young organizers, empowering them to drive a strategic response to the passage of the racist and anti-immigrant SB1070 state law. Those efforts helped build movement and lasting power in AZ for the immigrant and Latino community. Working closely with local organizations, Shuya also steered similar crisis to movement efforts in AL in 2011.Shuya was born in Tokyo, Japan, immigrated to the US at the age of 6, and grew up in New Jersey where he attended Rutgers College. He is now based in Washington, DC. - See more at: http://www.advancementproject.org/people/entry/shuya-ohno