Wednesday February 22, 2012

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Past Event

A CENTER FOR TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION EVENT

Immigration Policy: Highly Skilled Workers and U.S. Competitiveness and Innovation

Immigration, U.S. Economy, Labor, Competitiveness, Innovation

Event Summary

Foreign-born residents—students, skilled workers, professionals, and entrepreneurs, whether visiting temporarily or staying permanently—make important contributions to the U.S. economy, particularly in science and high-tech innovation. So what can U.S. immigration policy do to capitalize on highly skilled workers’ ideas and talents, while also maximizing the contributions of native-born citizens? What kind of foreign-born workers does the United States want to gain, and under what conditions? What policy changes should be enacted to ensure that America retains and attracts the world’s top talent?

Event Information

When

Monday, February 07, 2011
9:00 AM to 12:00 PM

Where

Falk Auditorium
The Brookings Institution
1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC
Map

Event Materials

Contact: Brookings Office of Communications

Email: events@brookings.edu

Phone: 202.797.6105


On February 7, the Center for Technology Innovation at Brookings and the Center for Science and Technology Policy at George Mason University hosted a forum on immigration policies toward the highly skilled and the reforms needed to capture the benefits of a high-skill immigrant workforce. Discussants also shared new research findings on immigration’s role in spurring innovation.

After the program, panelists took audience questions.

Transcript

DARRELL WEST: We are pleased to welcome to our gathering on Immigration Policy: Highly Skilled Workers and U.S. Competitiveness and Innovation. Foreign residents, students and entrepreneurs make valuable to contributions to the U.S. economy, but what we’re going to look at today is what should the U.S. do to capitalize on high-skilled workers, what kind of workers do we wish to attract and what policy changes should we consider to advance innovation.

Today we brought together some of our country’s top talent on innovation and immigration. They will discuss each of their perspectives on how to keep top foreign students here and also the role of highly skilled workers in the area of technology and entrepreneurship.

Participants

Welcoming Remarks

Darrell M. West

Vice President and Director, Governance Studies

David Hart

Professor and Director, Center for Science and Technology Policy
School of Public Policy, George Mason University

Panel I – The Best and the Brightest in Academia and Beyond

Moderator: Mitch Waldrop

News Features Editor
Nature

Robert V. Hamilton, Ph.D

Wyle Inc.
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center

Patrick Gaule

Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Sloan School of Management
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Lindsay Lowell

Director of Policy Studies, Institute for the Study of International Migration
Georgetown University

Darrell M. West

Vice President and Director, Governance Studies

Panel II – Highly Skilled Workers, Technology, and Entrepreneurship

Moderator: Kevin Finneran

Editor
Issues in Science and Technology

Jeanne Batalova

Policy Analyst
Migration Policy Institute

Jennifer Hunt

Professor, Department of Economics
McGill University

Ron Hira

Associate Professor of Public Policy
Rochester Institute of Technology

David Hart

Professor and Director, Center for Science and Technology Policy
School of Public Policy George Mason University


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