Highly Educated African Migrants Find Themselves Trapped in Cycle of Poverty in America

TMNT4000

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Highly Educated African Migrants Find Themselves Trapped in Cycle of Poverty in America
May 20, 2015 | Posted by Taylor Gordon


America has long been scrutinized for its policies and legislation surrounding immigration, and it seems like African immigrants from sub-Saharan countries are carrying some of the heaviest burdens.

When making the journey across the Atlantic, many African immigrants have no idea that they are leaving behind more than just a familiar land.

Those who have reputations as successful doctors and engineers, those who have worked tirelessly to earn some of the highest accolades universities have to offer and those who have spent years climbing their respective career ladders are often leaving those accomplishments behind as well.

Once they cross the boarder into America, many are forced to navigate a disheartening transition from economic success to a financial downfall that leaves them in the unforgiving grasps of poverty.

Highly educated and successful immigrants from sub-Saharan Africa are generally underemployed in America, despite a few states initiating new practices and policies to help curve this troubling trend.

This is a story that Nasser Diallo, an immigrant from Guinea, West Africa, is all too familiar with.

Diallo fled his home after the military sprayed protesters with a wave of bullets. The former political journalist was covering the demonstration when the tragedy struck, according to The Root.

When word got out that the military government was looking for him, he knew he had to leave his home behind. With no transcripts or other documentation to serve as proof of his extensive professional background in journalism, his career failed to take off in America.

“I had to make a very, very tough choice to go back to school and restart from scratch,” Diallo, who also held a law degree back in Guinea, told The Root. “I didn’t have a choice. I was going nowhere. By the time I’m going to graduate, I’ll be maybe 50.”

Unfortunately, Diallo’s story is only becoming more and more common as a part of a system that some experts say has resulted in widespread “brain waste.”

“We’ve all heart about brain drain,” Jeanne Batalova, a senior policy analyst with the Migration Policy Institute, told The Root. “This is brain waste.”

MPI reports that 1 in every 5 college-educated immigrants from another country is actually unemployed or underemployed in America. This means doctors, lawyers, psychologists, journalists, educators, esteemed authors, nurses and other professionals who have a lot to offer their communities and the economy at large, are instead being forced into unemployment lines or being asked to fulfill duties that don’t even utilize their degrees or years of experience in a particular field.

In addition to the cultural barriers and obstacles of racial discrimination, experts also point to the varying federal and state requirements for different professions in the U.S. as a culprit behind the underemployment of these immigrants.

“If you’re a nurse or a doctor, there are so many federal and state requirements that you have to fill,” Jeff Gross, the director of the New Americans Integration Institute at the Massachusetts Immigration and Refugee Advocacy Coalition, told The Root. “It’s very, very complicated and time-consuming.”

In professions of all types, however, there has always been a greater value placed on American degrees when compared to other countries across the globe; thus presenting yet another major hurdle in the way of highly educated immigrants.

Despite the severity of such a problem, little has been done to address the issue on a federal level, although states like Michigan have been slightly more proactive by teaming up with Upwardly Global.

Upwardly Global is described by The Root as an “employment advocacy agency for immigrants, to craft clear-cut licensing guides for 20 professions, so immigrants know exactly how to proceed.”

The state has also passed a bill that helps experienced barbers from other countries launch their businesses in America sooner without having to fulfill the same amount of instruction hours as someone without professional experience under their belt.

Another bill, passed in February, was introduced in the Illinois General Assembly to prohibit anyone from denying someone a professional license because of their immigration status.

http://atlantablackstar.com/2015/05...elves-trapped-in-cycle-of-poverty-in-america/
 
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filial_piety

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Atlantablackstar is an extremely suspect source…I've read articles by them before that were complete fantasy and/or partially and misleadingly true.

That being said, it's not particularly unique to African immigrants.

It was pretty well known that there were/are loads of Eastern Europeans who are highly educated in technical fields and hard science fields who were driving cabs for a living once they got to NY.

I think one the issues is primarily with the immigration status that makes the hiring process of these people extremely tedious and expensive for the employer. I have a friend that I was hooking up a job with through with a relative of mine. Once my relative found out that he did nt have a green card or citizenship…she didn't want to be bothered with the red tape and all the legal compliance regulations.

I think another problem is that some of these countries have different standards for their degree requirements….it doesn't mean that they aren't well educated in their fields…but sometimes on paper, there are hiring requirements that have to comply with federal regulations…especially in highly complex science fields.
 
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ReallJc

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What makes ''highly educated African migrants" think they'll fare better in America than ''highly educated descendants of Africans who have long been Americans already in this country" have? If you ignore the history of systemic racism in America and you think you'll come here and be integrated into the controlling factor of that system...you're "highly delusional!" Step back and rethink your plan.
 

frush11

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I know this shiit too well, my mom came here from Sierra Leone with an accountant degree, but that meant nada, she ended up going the nursing route.

Shiite is absurd, anyone who has a degree or did most of their studies in a poor country to me learned a lot more than their counterparts in this country.

Folks don't understand, fukking C's got you left back in most poor and African countries. Shiit when I came to this country, I was so ahead of most of my classmates in reading and math.
 
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Serious

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What makes ''highly educated African migrants" think they'll fare better in America than ''highly educated descendants of Africans who have long been Americans already in this country" have? If you ignore the history of systemic racism in America and you think you'll come here and be integrated into the controlling factor of that system...you're "highly delusional!" Step back and rethink your plan.
they are better off here if they don't have to worry about dodging bullets from the gov.
 

Hiphoplives4eva

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Definitely the truth. This is why most immigrants go for professional degrees. My dad got a BS in electrical engineering and couldn't get a job to save his life. He literally drove cabs for 10 years, but eventually because a serial entrepreneur.

Going to get a degree to get a job is one of the WORST ideas a black man can ever have in America. The only way for minorities to succeed is via business, but to get that capital a solid professional degree or skill is a must! IT, medicine, law, accounting, are all good choices to achieve this imho
 

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But the coli told me that black immigrants don't have white racist problems their all doing well and laugh at racism..

I worked in university admissions and this has way more to do with that process and the immigrants lack of preparation or knowledge of that process than racism.

If you can't prove what you were in your country you can't expect to just come to America and practice.

If you can prove what you were in your country you better be prepared to get recertified under our system.
 

CodeBlaMeVi

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We have Americans going thru that so back of the line.
 
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But the coli told me that black immigrants don't have white racist problems their all doing well and laugh at racism..
All black people that move here inevitably face the same circumstances dealing with racism and white supremacy.

Let's just be honest....This is the best country you can get as far as opportunity and it's still terrible for blacks but not as bad as other places.
 
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Funny story. I was working with a laborer and he was a late middle aged African man. Very dignified and humble. So one night we are talking in the work truck and we started talking about people having it hard and its spun off into the bible. Dude was running down scripture and peoples speeches and thesis on scripture. I asked him damn dude you really know the bible and bible history, he laughs and is like yeah in (I think it was) Nigeria I was a theology professor. I'm like wtf you doing as a 13hr laborer?? He couldnt get the proper working papers for some reason and had to do this. Felt bad for that dude.
 
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