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The American Midwest is facing an existential threat—not from outside forces, but from within. Population decline, aging communities, and shrinking tax bases are creating what researcher Dr. Jonathan Burkham calls a "demographic winter." But there's a solution hiding in plain sight: immigration.
In this episode, Lauren Clarke sits down with Dr. Burkham, author of the new book “Migrant Midwest: The Case for Immigration and Economic Growth in the American Heartland,” to explore how the region that once defined American industry and culture has become the least foreign-born area of the country. The conversation traces the Midwest's transformation from an immigration magnet—where 87% of Milwaukee's population at the turn of the 20th century were immigrants or their children—to today's demographic crisis.
Dr. Burkham presents a data-driven case for place-based immigration policy modeled after Canada's Provincial Nominee Program, allowing Midwest states to sponsor immigrants based on local economic needs in manufacturing, healthcare, and beyond. The discussion tackles political rhetoric versus economic reality, immigrant retention, and the fundamental choice facing America: continue growing as a global power, or manage decline like Japan. With evidence showing immigrants are net contributors who assimilate across generations, this conversation reframes immigration as the Midwest's lifeline.
HOST: LAUREN CLARKE
GUEST: Dr. Jonathan Burkham, Associate Professor of Human Geography, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Author of Migrant Midwest: The Case for Immigration and Economic Growth in the American Heartland
NEWS NERD: ROB TAYLOR
PRODUCER: ADAM BELMAR
Resource Links:
Migrant Midwest
The Case for Immigration and Economic Growth in the American Heartland
https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/migrant-midwest-9798216276098/
By Erickson Immigration Group4.9
8383 ratings
The American Midwest is facing an existential threat—not from outside forces, but from within. Population decline, aging communities, and shrinking tax bases are creating what researcher Dr. Jonathan Burkham calls a "demographic winter." But there's a solution hiding in plain sight: immigration.
In this episode, Lauren Clarke sits down with Dr. Burkham, author of the new book “Migrant Midwest: The Case for Immigration and Economic Growth in the American Heartland,” to explore how the region that once defined American industry and culture has become the least foreign-born area of the country. The conversation traces the Midwest's transformation from an immigration magnet—where 87% of Milwaukee's population at the turn of the 20th century were immigrants or their children—to today's demographic crisis.
Dr. Burkham presents a data-driven case for place-based immigration policy modeled after Canada's Provincial Nominee Program, allowing Midwest states to sponsor immigrants based on local economic needs in manufacturing, healthcare, and beyond. The discussion tackles political rhetoric versus economic reality, immigrant retention, and the fundamental choice facing America: continue growing as a global power, or manage decline like Japan. With evidence showing immigrants are net contributors who assimilate across generations, this conversation reframes immigration as the Midwest's lifeline.
HOST: LAUREN CLARKE
GUEST: Dr. Jonathan Burkham, Associate Professor of Human Geography, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
Author of Migrant Midwest: The Case for Immigration and Economic Growth in the American Heartland
NEWS NERD: ROB TAYLOR
PRODUCER: ADAM BELMAR
Resource Links:
Migrant Midwest
The Case for Immigration and Economic Growth in the American Heartland
https://www.bloomsbury.com/us/migrant-midwest-9798216276098/

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