Episodios

  • Ireland's Immigration Conundrum
    Mar 27 2026

    A confidential government paper recently surfaced in Ireland with a striking conclusion: the country needs migration to keep hospitals open, taxes flowing, and its economy afloat — even as public pressure mounts to tighten the rules. Host Lauren Clarke sits down with Katie McDermott, Managing Director of EIG's UK and Ireland offices, to unpack what that tension looks like on the ground in Dublin.

    Katie walks through Ireland's demographic math — a worker-to-pensioner ratio set to fall from 4.5 to 2.3 by 2051 — and what it means for employers competing for global talent in a system that's growing more complex, not less. They also get into the concept of "social license" for immigration, why the economic argument alone isn't enough to move public opinion, and what corporate clients navigating both the UK and Irish systems need to be thinking about right now.

    Resource Links:

    Book review: In Our Interest: How Democracies Can Make Immigration Popular | Law Gazette

    Monitoring Report on Integration 2024 Asylum and Migration Overview 2024: Ireland

    GUEST: Katie McDermott, EIG Managing Director, UK & Ireland

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    NEWS NERD: Rob Taylor

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar

    Más Menos
    35 m
  • One Year In — AILA Proposes A Better Way on Immigration
    Mar 11 2026

    One year into the current administration's immigration agenda, the American Immigration Lawyers Association has done the accounting — and the findings are striking. In this episode, Lauren Clarke sits down with Shev Dalal-Dheini, AILA's Senior Director of Government Relations, to walk through the organization's new A Better Way on Immigration policy brief series, the first wave of which examines what has actually happened to legal immigration pathways since January 2025.

    The conversation covers the administration's systematic dismantling of congressionally-authorized immigration programs — from TPS cancellations affecting 700,000 people, to paused adjudications leaving millions of applicants in limbo, to the closure of legal pathways for families, workers, and allies. Shev and Lauren also dig into the real-world consequences for U.S. employers, universities, hospitals, and communities — and what it means for America's long-term economic and national security competitiveness when other countries, from Canada to China, are actively recruiting the talent we're pushing away.

    GUEST: Shev Dalal-Dheini, Senior Director of Government Relations, AILA

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    NEWS NERD: Rob Taylor

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar

    Resource Links: AILA: A Better Way on Immigration Policy Briefs

    Más Menos
    36 m
  • Demographic Winter: Why the Midwest Needs Immigration to Survive
    Feb 19 2026

    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/

    Más Menos
    32 m
  • Olympic Dreams and Immigration Realities
    Feb 5 2026

    As the 2026 Winter Olympics approach, Immigration Nerds explores the hidden immigration stories behind Team USA's more than 230 athletes heading to Italy. Immigration researcher Marissa Kiss from George Mason University reveals that nearly 17% of Team USA has direct immigrant ties—including foreign-born athletes from five countries and second-generation immigrants whose parents came from around the world. The conversation between host Lauren Clarke and Marissa covers athletes competing despite citizenship delays, the "reverse flow" of US-born athletes representing other countries, and how immigration policy has become a competitive tool in international sports. Plus, the latest news, including updates on FIFA World Cup visa processing, Texas's H-1B hiring pause for state agencies, and the latest on immigrant visa suspensions.

    Resource Links: George Mason University Institute for Immigration Research

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    GUEST: Marissa Kiss, Assistant Director, Immigration, Race, and Sports, George Mason University's Institute for Immigration Research

    NEWS NERD: Rob Taylor

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar

    Más Menos
    27 m
  • End of the H-1B Lottery: Understanding Wage-Weighted Selection
    Jan 16 2026

    The H-1B program just underwent its most significant structural change in decades. On December 29, 2025, DHS issued a final rule replacing the random H-1B lottery with a wage-weighted selection system—and it takes effect February 27, just before the fiscal year 2027 cap registration season opens in March.

    Immigration Nerds host Lauren Clarke sits down with EIG's newest partner Naïanka Rigaud to break down exactly how this weighted system works. They explore the complex legal analysis behind wage level determinations, what the 48% decrease in selection probability means for Level 1 registrants versus the 107% increase for Level 4 candidates, and why simply earning a high salary doesn't guarantee a higher wage level classification.

    From geographic wage disparities to potential compliance pitfalls, Lauren and Naïanka cover what employers and foreign workers need to understand right now—including the possibility that registration infrastructure might not be ready, potentially reverting to full petition submissions. This is essential listening for anyone navigating H-1B cap season 2027.

    GUEST: Naïanka Rigaud, EIG Partner

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    NEWS NERD: Rob Taylor

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar

    Más Menos
    33 m
  • Inspiring Immigration Stories Of 2025
    Dec 18 2025

    Immigration isn't just about headlines—it's about Nobel laureates, World Series MVPs, and medical breakthroughs that save lives. In this year’s end special, Lauren Clarke welcomes back Forbes senior contributor Stuart Anderson to preview his annual "Most Inspiring Immigration Stories" article.

    From Omar Yagi's journey from refugee to Nobel Prize winner in chemistry, to Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto's heroic World Series performance, to a groundbreaking cancer treatment discovered by a PhD student who annoyed her lab mates—these stories reveal the extraordinary contributions immigrants make when America opens its doors. Plus, the remarkable legacy of Charles Watts, who sponsored over 300 Vietnamese refugees. What do these diverse stories tell us about innovation, opportunity, and America itself?

    SHOW RESOURCE LINKS:

    The Most Inspiring Immigration Stories Of 2025: https://www.forbes.com/sites/stuartanderson/

    https://nfap.com/about-us/biographies/


    GUEST: Stuart Anderson/Executive Director, National Foundation for American Policy, Senior Contributor to Forbes

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar

    Más Menos
    18 m
  • 2025: The Year That Reshaped Immigration Policy
    Dec 11 2025

    2025 marked an unprecedented transformation in U.S. immigration policy. Executive orders attempting to end birthright citizenship, expand travel bans, and suspend refugee programs— along with the chaotic H-1B fee proclamation — fundamentally reshaped both legal and humanitarian immigration pathways.

    In this episode, immigration policy strategist Maunica Sthanki joins host Lauren Clarke to examine the executive action-heavy approach, constitutional challenges, and what 217+ executive orders reveal about presidential power limits. They explore the real-world impacts on refugees, employment-based immigration, and asylum seekers—and what polling data suggests about public perception shifting as restrictive policies play out.

    Plus, Rob Taylor covers breaking news on Haiti TPS, enhanced vetting requirements, and global immigration tightening trends as we head into 2026's midterm election year.

    GUEST: Maunica Sthanki, Immigration Policy and Advocacy Strategist

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    NEWS NERD: Rob Taylor

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar

    Resource Links: https://www.sthankistrategies.com/

    Más Menos
    40 m
  • Beyond Borders: Why Cultural Exchange Still Matters
    Nov 20 2025

    Beyond the headlines about the workforce and the economy lies a visa category designed for something deeper: human connection.

    In this episode, Immigration Nerds host Lauren Clarke explores the J-1 Cultural Exchange Program with Lisa Murray, Director of the Exchange Program at the American Immigration Council. From camp counselors to research scholars, the J-1 brings thousands of cultural ambassadors to American communities each year. These visitors are not in the US to fill permanent jobs, but to build bridges of understanding that transcend borders.

    Lisa shares her own teenage exchange experience and explains why these temporary programs matter now more than ever, challenging misconceptions while revealing how cultural diplomacy creates ripple effects that strengthen communities and international relationships for decades to come.

    GUEST: Lisa Murray, Director, Exchange Program | American Immigration Council

    HOST: Lauren Clarke

    NEWS NERD: Rob Taylor

    PRODUCER: Adam Belmar


    Resource Links:

    American Immigration Council

    US Exchange Visitor Visa

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    26 m