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African immigration to the United States

African immigration to the United States refers to immigrants to the United States who are or were nationals of modern African countries. The term African in the scope of this article refers to geographical or national origins rather than racial affiliation. Between the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 and 2017, Sub-Saharan African-born population in the United States grew to 2.1 million people.[2]

Sub-Saharan African Americans the United States
Sub-Saharan African Americans
Total population
African: 3,183,104 (Sub-Saharan African: 2,847,199 + North African: 335,895) (2010 U.S. Census) [1]
Regions with significant populations
New York City, Washington-Baltimore metropolitan area, Philadelphia, New Jersey, Houston, Atlanta, Dallas, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco/Oakland/San Jose, Minneapolis, Columbus, Chicago, Boston, Providence, Miami, New Orleans, Tennessee, Albuquerque, Salt Lake City, Seattle, Portland, Denver
Languages
English (African English, American English), Arabic, Igbo, Yoruba, Akan, Lingala, Nuer,

Meta, Dinka, Shilluk,

French, Wolof, Swahili, Amharic, Somali, Tigrinya, Berber, Afrikaans, Hausa, Portuguese, Cape Verdean Crioulo, Spanish, others
Religion
Related ethnic groups
Other African people

Sub-Saharan Africans in the United States come from almost all regions in Africa and do not constitute a homogeneous group. They include peoples from different national, linguistic, ethnic, racial, cultural and social backgrounds.[3] As such, US and foreign born Sub-Saharan Africans are distinct from native-born African Americans, many of whose ancestors were involuntarily brought from West and Central Africa to the colonial United States by means of the historic Atlantic slave trade. African immigration is now driving the growth of the Black population in New York City.[4]

Immigration legislation Edit

Citizenship Edit

In the 1870s, the Naturalization Act was extended to allow "aliens, being free white persons and to aliens of African nativity and to persons of African descent" to acquire citizenship. Immigration from Africa was theoretically permitted, unlike non-white immigration from Asia.[citation needed]

Quotas enacted between 1921 and 1924 Edit

Several laws enforcing national origins quotas on U.S. immigration were enacted between 1921 and 1924 and were in effect until they were repealed in 1965. While the laws were aimed at restricting the immigration of Jews and Catholics from Southern and Eastern Europe and immigration from Asia, they also impacted African immigrants. The legislation effectively excluded Africans from entering the country.

The Emergency Quota Act of 1921 restricted immigration from a given country to 3% of the number of people from that country living in the U.S. according to the census of 1910. The Immigration Act of 1924, also known as the Johnson-Reed Act, reduced that to 2% of the number of people from that country who were already living in the U.S. in 1890. Under the system, the quota for immigrants from Africa (excluding Egypt) totaled 1,100 (the number was increased to 1,400 under the 1952 McCarran–Walter Act.) [5] That contrasted to immigrants from Germany, which had a limit of 51,227.[6]

Repeal of quotas Edit

The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, also known as the Hart-Celler Act, repealed the national quotas and subsequently there was a substantial increase in the number of immigrants from developing countries, particularly in Africa and Asia. This act also provided a separate category for refugees. The act also provided greater opportunity for family reunification.

Diversity Immigrant Visa Edit

The Diversity Visa Program, or green card lottery, is a program created by the Immigration Act of 1990. It allows people born in countries with low rates of immigration to the United States to obtain a lawful permanent resident status. Each year, 50,000 of those visas are distributed at random. Almost 38% of those visas were attributed to African born immigrants in 2016.[7] African born persons also represent the most numerous group among the applicants since 2013.[8] The application is free of charge, and the requirements in terms of education are either a high school diploma or two years of a professional experience requiring at least two years of training.

Recent migration trends and factors Edit

 
African immigration to the U.S. by broad class of admission

The continent of Africa has seen many changes in migrations patterns over the course of history.[9] The graph below shows African immigration to the United States in 2016 based on class of admission with numbers from the Department of Homeland Security's Yearbook.[10]

The influx of African immigrants began in the latter part of the 20th century and is often referred to as the "fourth great migration." About three-fourths of all out-migration from Africa went to the United States after 1990.[7] This trend began after decolonization, as many Africans moved to the U.S. seeking an education and to escape poverty, and has risen steadily over time. The increase in the rate of migration is projected to continue for the coming decades.[11] Originally, these immigrants came with the sole purpose of advancing themselves before returning to their respective countries. Nevertheless, many immigrants never return. In recent years there has been an increase in the number of African immigrants interested in gaining permanent residence in the U.S.; this has led to a severe brain drain on the economies of African countries due to many skilled hard-working Africans leaving Africa to seek their economic fortunes in the U.S. and elsewhere.

One major factor that contributes to migration from Africa to the United States is labor opportunities. It has been relatively easier for African immigrants with advanced education to leave and enter international labor markets. In addition, many Africans move to the United States for advanced training. For example, doctors from different African nations would move to the U.S. in order to gain more economic opportunities compared to their home country.[14] However, as more Africans emigrate to the United States, their reasoning and factors tend to become more complex.[15]

Many Africans who migrate to the United States return their income to Africa in the source of remittances. In Nigeria, for example, remittances from Nigerians in the United States to Nigeria totaled to $6.1 billion in 2012, approximately 3% of Nigeria's GDP.[12] The important role of remittances in improving the lives of family members in the United States has led to both migration and migrants remaining in the United States.

Following educational and economic trends of migration, family reunification has driven recent trends of migration. Family reunification refers to the ability of U.S. citizens to sponsor family members for immigration. Sponsoring immediate family members and other family preferences led to 45% and 10% of all African immigration in 2016 respectively.[13] Legal service organizations such as the African Advocacy Network aid in family members sponsoring new immigrants to the United States.[14]

Additionally, refugees make up a large class of admission to the United States. Recent crises in the Central African Republic, South Sudan, Nigeria, and Burundi have been sources of migrants in recent years.[15] With recent restrictions on refugee entrance to the United States, refugees may face a harder time entering the United States.

Population Edit

African immigrants' (US) ancestries in the 2000[16] – 2010[17] American Community Survey (from more than 1,000 people)
Ancestry 2000 2000 (% of U.S. population) 2010 2010 (% of U.S. population)
"African" 1,183,316[16] negligible (no data) 1,676,413[17] negligible (no data)
  Algerian 8,752[16] negligible (no data) 14,716[18] negligible (no data)
  Angolan 1,642[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Cameroonian 8,099[16] negligible (no data) 16,894[19] negligible (no data)
  Cape Verdean 77,103[16] negligible (no data) 95,003[17] negligible (no data)
    Congolese 5,488 (of the Democratic Republic of the Congo)[16] negligible (no data) 11,009[19] negligible (no data)
"Eastern Africans" 2,129[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Egyptian 142,832[16] negligible (no data) 197,000[17] negligible (no data)
  Eritrean 18,917[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Ethiopian 68,001[16] negligible (no data) 202,715[17] negligible (no data)
  Gambian 3,035[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Ghanaian 49,944[16] negligible (no data) 91,322[17] negligible (no data)
  Guinea 3,016[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Ivorian 3,110[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Kenyan 17,336[16] negligible (no data) 51,749[17] negligible (no data)
  Liberian 25,575[16] negligible (no data) 51,296[17] negligible (no data)
  Libyan 2,979[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Malian 1,790[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Moroccan 38,923[16] negligible (no data) 82,073 negligible (no data)
  Nigerian 162,938[16] negligible (no data) 264,550[17] negligible (no data)
"North African/Berber" 4,544
("North Africans": 3,217; "Berbers": 1,327)[16]
negligible (no data)
  Rwandan 1,480[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Senegalese 6,124[16] negligible (no data) 11,369[17] negligible (no data)
  Sierra Leonean 12,410[16] negligible (no data) 16,929[17] negligible (no data)
  Somali 36,313[16] negligible (no data) 120,102[17] negligible (no data)
  South African 44,991[16] negligible (no data) 57,491[17] negligible (no data)
  Sudanese 14,458[16] negligible (no data) 42,249[17] negligible (no data)
  Tanzanian 2,921[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Togolese 1,716[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Tunisian 4,735[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Ugandan 4,707[16] negligible (no data) 12,549 negligible (no data)
"Western African" 6,810[16] negligible (no data)
  Zambian 1,500[16] negligible (no data) negligible (no data)
  Zimbabwean 4,521[16] negligible (no data) 7,323[17] negligible (no data)
TOTAL More than 1,000,000 0.2%[citation needed] NA NA

Demographics Edit


Metros with largest African-born population (2010 Census)
Metropolitan area African population % of total metro population
Washington, DC, MD-VA-WV 171,000 2.9
Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN 70,100 1.3
Atlanta, GA 70,100 1.3
Boston, MA-NH 61,600 1.3
Baltimore Area, MD 33,100 1.2
New York, NY 223,000 1.1
Dallas–Fort Worth, TX 64,300 0.9
Houston, TX 56,100 0.9
Greater Los Angeles Area 68,100 0.5
San Francisco Bay Area 24,500 0.5

The total immigrant population from Africa estimated for 2015-2019 was 2,256,700.[20] The top counties were:

1) Harris County, TX ----------------------------- 70,200

2) Los Angeles County, CA ------------------- 59,900

3) Bronx Borough, NY --------------------------- 56,000

4) Montgomery County, MD ----------------- 54,700

5) Hennepin County, MN ---------------------- 53,700

6) Prince George's County, MD ------------- 53,000

7) Dallas County, TX ----------------------------- 46,700

8) King County, WA ------------------------------- 42,500

9) Cook County, IL -------------------------------- 42,100

10) Franklin County, OH ----------------------- 41,400

11) Fairfax County, VA -------------------------- 39,400

12) Tarrant County, TX ------------------------- 34,900

13) Brooklyn Borough, NY -------------------- 32,500

14) Gwinnett County, GA ---------------------- 26,800

15) Essex County, NJ --------------------------- 26,700

16) Suffolk County, Mass. -------------------- 25,000

17) Philadelphia County, PA ----------------- 25,000

18) Queens Borough, NY ---------------------- 24,700

19) DeKalb County, GA ------------------------- 24,500

20) Maricopa County, AZ --------------------- 24,000

21) Middlesex County, Mass. --------------- 23,500

22) Fort Bend County, TX --------------------- 22,000

23) Manhattan Borough, NY ---------------- 21,700

24) Baltimore County, MD ------------------ 21,500

25) Ramsey County, MN ---------------------- 20,300

It is estimated that the 2017 population of African immigrants to the United States was about 2.1 million.[2] According to the Migration Policy Institute, as of 2009 two-thirds of the African immigrants were from either East or West Africa.[21] Countries with the most immigrants to the U.S. are Nigeria, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, South Africa, Somalia, Eritrea, and Kenya. Seventy five percent (75%) of the African immigrants to the U.S. come from 12 of the 55 countries, namely Nigeria, Egypt, Ghana, Ethiopia, South Africa, Kenya, Liberia, Somalia, Morocco, Cape Verde, Sierra Leone and Sudan (including what is now the independent country of South Sudan), which is based on the 2000 census data.[22]

Additionally, according to the U.S. Census, 55% of immigrants from Africa are male, while 45% are female. Age groups with the largest cohort of African-born immigrants are 25–34, 35–44, and 45–54 with 24.5%, 27.9%, and 15.0% respectively.[23]

Africans typically congregate in urban areas, moving to suburban areas over time. They are also one of the groups who are least likely to live in racially segregated areas.[24][25] The goals of Africans vary tremendously. While some look to create new lives in the US, some plan on using the resources and skills gained to go back and help their countries of origin. Either way, African communities contribute millions to the economies of Africa through remittances. Ogbuagu (2013) found that Diasporic Nigerians across the globe reportedly remitted $21 billion (N3.36 trillion-Naira) to the homeland in 2012 alone.

Immigrants from Africa, once they arrive in the U.S., typically settle in heavily urban areas upon arrival. Areas such as Washington DC, New York, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Houston, Atlanta, Los Angeles, Boston, Columbus, and Minneapolis have heavy concentrations of African immigrant populations. Often there are clusters of nationalities within these cities. The longer African immigrants live in the United States, the more likely they are to live in suburban areas.

In the San Francisco Bay Area, there are officially 40,000 African immigrants, although it has been estimated that the population is actually four times this number when considering undocumented immigrants. The majority of these immigrants were born in Ethiopia, Egypt, Nigeria, and South Africa.

African immigrants like many other immigrant groups are likely to establish and find success in small businesses. Many Africans that have seen the social and economic stability that comes from ethnic enclaves such as Chinatowns have recently been establishing ethnic enclaves of their own at much higher rates to reap the benefits of such communities.[26] Such examples include Little Ethiopia in Los Angeles and Little Senegal in New York City.

State/territory Subsaharan African
population (2019 Census)[27]
Percentage
  Alabama 44,872
  Alaska 2,200[28]
  Arizona 58,584
  Arkansas 42,549
  California 319,119
  Colorado 56,591
  Connecticut 38,138
  Delaware 15,648
  District of Columbia 20,108
  Florida 161,983
  Georgia 199,299
  Hawaii 4,510
  Idaho 3,243
  Illinois 127,008
  Indiana 61,567
  Iowa 31,301
  Kansas 26,179
  Kentucky 38,745
  Louisiana 45,340
  Maine 14,674
  Maryland 248,180
  Massachusetts 149,753
  Michigan 80,461
  Minnesota 178,662
  Mississippi 2,300[29]
  Missouri 54,003
  Montana 2,760
  Nebraska 28,566
  Nevada 45,510
  New Hampshire 8,701
  New Jersey 122,485
  New Mexico 6,826
  New York 263,282
  North Carolina 133,428
  North Dakota 8,100[30]
  Ohio 137,487
  Oklahoma 17,477
  Oregon 24,159
  Pennsylvania 131,704
  Rhode Island 30,235
  South Carolina 47,684
  South Dakota 7,200[31]
  Tennessee 95,626
  Texas 446,330
  Utah 18,672
  Vermont 2,400[32]
  Virginia 226,140
  Washington 114,071
  West Virginia 8,748
  Wisconsin 32,632
  Wyoming -
USA 2 million

Educational attainment Edit

African immigrants to the US are among the most educated groups in the United States. Some 48.9 percent of all African immigrants hold a college diploma. This is more than double the rate of native-born white Americans, and nearly four times the rate of native-born African Americans.[33] According to the 2000 Census, the rate of college diploma acquisition is highest among Egyptian Americans at 59.7 percent, followed closely by Nigerian Americans at 58.6 percent.[34][35]

In 1997, 19.4 percent of all adult African immigrants in the United States held a graduate degree, compared to 8.1 percent of adult white Americans and 3.8 percent of adult black Americans in the United States, respectively.[36] According to the 2000 Census, the percentage of Africans with a graduate degree is highest among Nigerian Americans at 28.3 percent, followed by Egyptian Americans at 23.8 percent.[34][35]

Of the African-born population in the US age 25 and older, 87.9% reported having a high school degree or higher,[37] compared with 78.8% of Asian-born immigrants and 76.8% of European-born immigrants, respectively.[38] Africans from Kenya (90.8 percent), Nigeria (89.1 percent), Ghana (85.9 percent), Botswana (84.7 percent), and Malawi (83 percent) were the most likely to report having a high school degree or higher.

Those born in Cape Verde (44.8 percent) and Mauritania (60.8 percent) were the least likely to report having completed a high school education.[39]

Health Edit

U.S. immigrants that come from predominantly black nations in Africa are generally healthier than black immigrants from predominantly white nations or from Europe. A study conducted by Jen'nan Ghazal Read, a sociology professor at the UC Irvine, and Michael O. Emerson, a sociology professor at Rice University, studied the health of more than 2,900 black immigrants from top regions of emigration: the West Indies, Africa, South America and Europe. Black people born in Africa and South America have been shown to be healthier than U.S.-born black people.[40][41] The study was published in the September issue of Social Forces and is the first to look at the health of black immigrants by their region of origin.[42]

Culture Edit

African immigrants tend to retain their culture once in the United States. Instead of abandoning their various traditions, they find ways to reproduce and reinvent themselves.[43] Cultural bonds are cultivated through shared ethnic or national affiliations. Some organizations like the Ghanaian group Fantse-Kuo and the Sudanese Association organize by country, region, or ethnic group. Other nonprofits like the Malawi Washington Association[44] organize by national identity, and are inclusive of all Malawians. Other groups present traditional culture from a pan-African perspective. Using traditional skills and knowledge, African-born entrepreneurs develop services for immigrants and the community at large. In the Washington area, events such as the annual Ethiopian soccer tournament, institutions such as the AME Church African Liberation Ministry, and "friends" and "sister cities" organizations bring together different communities. The extent to which African immigrants engage in these activities naturally varies according to the population.

Religion Edit

Religion of African-born Americans (2020)[45]

  Protestantism (55%)
  Catholicism (20%)
  Other Christian (8%)
  Unaffiliated (8%)
  Other Religion (10%)

The religious traditions of African immigrants tend to be pluralistic; they are seen not only as religious institutions, but in many cases also as civic centers. These organizations are central to persevering ethnic identity among these communities.[46][citation needed] African immigrant religious communities are also central networks and provide services such as counseling, shelter, employment, financial assistance, health services, and real estate tips.

Christianity Edit

African immigrants practice a diverse array of religions, including Christianity, Islam, and various traditional African faiths. Of these adherents, the largest number are Pentecostals/Charismatic Christians. This form of Christianity is a "primarily evangelical, born-again Pentecostal sect that emphasizes holiness, fervent prayer, charismatic revival, proximate salvation, speaking in tongues, baptism of the Holy Spirit, faith healing, visions, and divine revelations."[46]

Among popular denominational churches are the Brotherhood of the Cross and Star, Seventh Day Adventist Church, Celestial Church of Christ, Cherubim and Seraphim, Christ Apostolic Church, Church of Pentecost, Deeper Life Bible Church, Mountain of Fire and Miracle Ministries (MFM), the Presbyterian Church of Ghana, the Redeemed Christian Church of God and [46][citation needed] Christ Embassy.

Additionally, Ethiopians and Eritreans have their own churches wherever there is a significant Ethiopian or Eritrean population. Their churches are mainly Ethiopian or Eritrean Orthodox and a few Catholic churches.

Continental African churches Edit

Many African communities have created their own churches in the United States modeled on continental African churches. Many African churches are Pan-African, but some consist only of nationals from the country of origin. This allows for worship in the native languages of the congregation.

Islam Edit

Muslim immigrants from nations in Africa adhere to diverse Islamic traditions. These include various Sunni, Shia and Sufi mainstream orders and schools (madhhab) from West Africa, the Swahili Coast, the Indian Ocean islands, the Horn of Africa, and North Africa.

Cultural influence Edit

Television Edit

Many local cable channels are now purchasing programming channels operated by various African communities. For example, the Africa Channel is broadcast in the United States through Comcast, Charter Communications, Cox Communications and also available in Jamaica, the Bahamas, Trinidad & Tobago, St. Lucia, Barbados, Bermuda, Grenada and other islands throughout the Caribbean.[47] The channel is a showcase for outstanding travel, lifestyle and cultural series, specials and documentaries. These programs feature people of African descent and their stories. The network's premiere on September 1, 2005, marked a milestone in U.S. television history. For the first time, American audiences were able to experience the successes, celebrations and challenges of people living throughout Africa and the Diaspora, all via a general entertainment network. The network is broadcast in the U.S. through national distribution deals with the largest cable MSOs in the country, including Comcast, Charter, and Cox. TV news services such as the Nigerian Television Authority, South African Broadcasting Channel and Ethiopian Television Programming are also available in some areas.

Restaurants Edit

Immigrants from Africa have opened restaurants in urban areas. The DC, Atlanta and NYC Metro areas host many eateries belonging to the Liberian, Senegalese, Nigerian, Ethiopian, Tanzanian, South African and other communities.

Music Edit

The New York Times and academic scholar Nnamdi O. Madichie have credited American African artists Kelela and Akon for employing fluidity of their cultural heritage through their U.S. and African identities. Recently, academic scholars have brought attention to the influence of African American music on U.S. culture. According to ethnomusicologist Portia Maultsby, African immigrant artists have impacted the U.S. through fashion and mainstream music by utilizing their cultural heritage as a foundation for their artistry. In "Marketing Senegal through hip-hop-a discourse analysis of Akon's music and lyrics", Madichie cites Senegalese-American singer, Akon, as a first-generation African immigrant musician whose music and lyrics create a confluence of West Africa-styled vocals mixed with North America's East Coast and Southern beats.[48] In Mama Africa and Senegal, Akon builds connections between Diasporic communities and the "homeland" through his music.[48]

An examination of the role of Black American entrepreneurs in the hip-hop industry suggests that young Black people have been able to influence the White dominated music industry through transforming "Blackness into capital, staffing and business connections".[49] The New York Times article, "25 Songs That Tell Us Where Music Is Going" illustrates how African immigrants have used their heritage to influence a new sound of mainstream music in the U.S.[50] Wortham cites Kelela, an Ethiopian-American musician, as an American African immigrant who has impacted U.S. culture by defying the notion that Blackness is monolithic through music that pushes the boundaries of R&B in uninhibited experimentation.[50]

Ethnomusicologist Mellonee Burnim's area of aesthetic significance are style of delivery, sound quality, and mechanics of delivery-qualities common to African-derived music.[51] Style of delivery is one of the most important aspects of Africanisms in music. This refers to the stage presentation and physical appearance of when music is performed.[52] Physical appearance is a fundamental part of the Black cultural expression in regard to African-American music. The sways and sashays as well as the physical appearance of African immigrant musicians has a significant influence on U.S. culture exemplified through fashion trends.[52]

Along with style of delivery, sound quality is another significant tradition of Black music that derives from Africanisms.[53] The sound quality of African-American music distinguishes itself because of its African sentiments that are foreign to Western patterns.[52] Maultsby describes how in Africa and the black diaspora, black musicians have managed to cultivate an array of unique sounds that imitate nature, animals, spirits, and speech into their music.[51] Mechanics of delivery involves improvisation of time, text, and pitch to deliver Black audiences a variety in performances.[54]

Textures can be increased through solo voices or adding layers of handclaps. This technique described as "staggered entrances" derives from the improvised singing of slaves.[54] Time is another basic component that can be expanded by extending the length of notes. Finally, pitch produces juxtaposing voices of different ranges in a single voice.[51]

Visibility Edit

Notable African academics in the U.S. include full tenured professors at the nation's top universities, including, at MIT, Elfatih A.B. Eltahir from Sudan;[55] at Caltech, 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Winner Ahmed Zewail from Egypt; at Yale, professor Lamin Sanneh[56] from Gambia; at Pennsylvania State University, professor Augustin Banyaga, from Rwanda; at Harvard, professors Jacob Olupona,[57] from Nigeria, Barack Obama Sr. from Kenya, Emmanuel K. Akyeampong from Ghana,[58] Biodun Jeyifo from Nigeria,[58] and John Mugane from Kenya;[58] and at Princeton, Adel Mahmoud [59] from Egypt, Wole Soboyejo[60] from Nigeria, Simon Gikandi[61] from Kenya, V. Kofi Agawu from Ghana,[62] and Kwame Anthony Appiah from Ghana.

In sports, Hakeem Olajuwon, Dikembe Mutombo, Darlington Nagbe, and Freddy Adu are prominent.

Academy Award-winning actress Charlize Theron, entrepreneur Elon Musk, and Grammy Award-winning musician Dave Matthews, are all white South Africans; and two-time Academy Award-nominated actor Djimon Hounsou and Grammy-winning musician Angelique Kidjo, both from Benin; and recently Lupita Nyong'o and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, are most notable.

Notable people of African ancestry Edit

The following is a list of notable people of Sub-Saharan African ancestry.

Academia and science Edit

Politics Edit

  • Muna Khalif, Somali, fashion designer and politician; MP in the Federal Parliament of Somalia
  • Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou, Mauritanian, scholar and politician; former Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Mauritania
  • Joe Neguse, Eritrean-American politician; first Eritrean-American elected to the United States Congress and Colorado's first congressman of African descent
  • Barack Obama Sr., Kenyan immigrant who fathered the 44th President of the United States
  • Ilhan Omar, Somali, incumbent U.S. Representative for Minnesota's 5th congressional district
  • Dina Powell, Egyptian, current U.S. Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategy,

Abakar z. Zaid, decorated veteran of the U.S Marines, there are many others Africans serving in the 6 branches of the Armed Forces.

TV and film Edit

Sports Edit

Business Edit

  • Roelof Botha, South African, former chief financial officer of PayPal
  • Kase Lukman Lawal, Nigerian, chairman and chief executive officer, CAMAC Holdings
  • Elon Musk, South African, co-founder of PayPal, SpaceX and Tesla Motors; CEO and CTO of SpaceX; CEO and product architect of Tesla Motors; chairman of SolarCity

Fashion Edit

Journalism and literature Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ a b Solomon, Salem (February 17, 2017). "Sub-Saharan African Population on Rise in US". Voice of America. Retrieved 26 February 2017.
  3. ^ David E. Kyoso, Immigrants in the United States, (Godfrey Mwakikagile: 2010), p. 110.
  4. ^ Kimiko de Freytas-Tamura (January 13, 2023). "African and Invisible: The Other New York Migrant Crisis". The New York Times. Retrieved January 26, 2023.
  5. ^ [Bashi, V. (2004, July 4). Globalizing Anti-Blackness: Transnationalzing Western Immigration law, policy and practice. Retrieved May 1, 2010, from Ethnic and Racial Studies: http://www.arts.yorku.ca/soci/goldring/4390/readings/pdf/bashi_globalized_anti-blackness.pdf[permanent dead link]]
  6. ^ George Mason University. (1998). Who was Shut Out?: Immigration Quotas, 1925-1927. Retrieved May 1, 2010, from History Matters: http://historymatters.gmu.edu/d/5078/ 2015-12-16 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ "Table 10. Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status By Broad Class Of Admission And Region And Country Of Birth: Fiscal Year 2016". Department of Homeland Security. 2017-05-16. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
  8. ^ "Diversity Visa Program Statistics". travel.state.gov. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
  9. ^ Collyer, Michael, ed. Emigration nations: Policies and ideologies of emigrant engagement. Springer, 2013.
  10. ^ "Table 10. Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status By Broad Class Of Admission And Region And Country Of Birth: Fiscal Year 2016". Department of Homeland Security. 2017-05-16. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
  11. ^ The Economist, March 28th 2020, page 6.
  12. ^ "The Nigerian Diaspora in the United States". Migration Policy Institute. June 2015.
  13. ^ "Table 10. Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status By Broad Class Of Admission And Region And Country Of Birth: Fiscal Year 2016". Department of Homeland Security. 2017-05-16. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
  14. ^ "African Advocacy Network". African Advocacy Network. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
  15. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Africa". UNHCR. Retrieved 2018-03-03.
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  20. ^ "U.S. Immigrant Population by State and County". migrationpolicy.org. 2014-02-04. Retrieved 2022-02-23.
  21. ^ McCabe, Kristen. "African immigrants in the United States." Washington, DC: Migration Policy Institute (2011).
  22. ^ Otiso, Kefa (11 June 2007). . MShale news. Archived from the original on 22 June 2007. Retrieved 30 October 2016.
  23. ^ US Census Bureau – People Born in Africa
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External links Edit

  • New York Times: Tastes of Nigeria, Sounds of Sierra Leone
  • New York Times: Bronx: Beyond the Yankees and the Zoo
  • New York Times: Solace From a Multiethnic Tapestry
  • Oakland Tribune: Black immigrants: The invisible model minority
  • Remittances and in-kind products as agency for community development and anti-poverty sustainability: Making a case for Diasporic Nigerians. Ogbuagu, B.C. (2013).
  • International Journal of Development and Sustainability 2(3), 1828-1857. Online ISSN 2186-8662 – www.isdsnet.com/ijds ISDS Article ID: IJDS13052905

african, immigration, united, states, refers, immigrants, united, states, were, nationals, modern, african, countries, term, african, scope, this, article, refers, geographical, national, origins, rather, than, racial, affiliation, between, immigration, nation. African immigration to the United States refers to immigrants to the United States who are or were nationals of modern African countries The term African in the scope of this article refers to geographical or national origins rather than racial affiliation Between the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 and 2017 Sub Saharan African born population in the United States grew to 2 1 million people 2 Sub Saharan African Americans the United StatesSub Saharan African AmericansTotal populationAfrican 3 183 104 Sub Saharan African 2 847 199 North African 335 895 2010 U S Census 1 Regions with significant populationsNew York City Washington Baltimore metropolitan area Philadelphia New Jersey Houston Atlanta Dallas Los Angeles San Diego San Francisco Oakland San Jose Minneapolis Columbus Chicago Boston Providence Miami New Orleans Tennessee Albuquerque Salt Lake City Seattle Portland DenverLanguagesEnglish African English American English Arabic Igbo Yoruba Akan Lingala Nuer Meta Dinka Shilluk French Wolof Swahili Amharic Somali Tigrinya Berber Afrikaans Hausa Portuguese Cape Verdean Crioulo Spanish othersReligionChristianityIslamtraditionalothersRelated ethnic groupsOther African peopleSub Saharan Africans in the United States come from almost all regions in Africa and do not constitute a homogeneous group They include peoples from different national linguistic ethnic racial cultural and social backgrounds 3 As such US and foreign born Sub Saharan Africans are distinct from native born African Americans many of whose ancestors were involuntarily brought from West and Central Africa to the colonial United States by means of the historic Atlantic slave trade African immigration is now driving the growth of the Black population in New York City 4 Contents 1 Immigration legislation 1 1 Citizenship 1 2 Quotas enacted between 1921 and 1924 1 3 Repeal of quotas 1 4 Diversity Immigrant Visa 2 Recent migration trends and factors 3 Population 4 Demographics 5 Educational attainment 6 Health 7 Culture 8 Religion 8 1 Christianity 8 1 1 Continental African churches 8 2 Islam 9 Cultural influence 9 1 Television 9 2 Restaurants 9 3 Music 10 Visibility 11 Notable people of African ancestry 11 1 Academia and science 11 2 Politics 11 3 TV and film 11 4 Sports 11 5 Business 11 6 Fashion 11 7 Journalism and literature 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksImmigration legislation EditCitizenship Edit In the 1870s the Naturalization Act was extended to allow aliens being free white persons and to aliens of African nativity and to persons of African descent to acquire citizenship Immigration from Africa was theoretically permitted unlike non white immigration from Asia citation needed Quotas enacted between 1921 and 1924 Edit Several laws enforcing national origins quotas on U S immigration were enacted between 1921 and 1924 and were in effect until they were repealed in 1965 While the laws were aimed at restricting the immigration of Jews and Catholics from Southern and Eastern Europe and immigration from Asia they also impacted African immigrants The legislation effectively excluded Africans from entering the country The Emergency Quota Act of 1921 restricted immigration from a given country to 3 of the number of people from that country living in the U S according to the census of 1910 The Immigration Act of 1924 also known as the Johnson Reed Act reduced that to 2 of the number of people from that country who were already living in the U S in 1890 Under the system the quota for immigrants from Africa excluding Egypt totaled 1 100 the number was increased to 1 400 under the 1952 McCarran Walter Act 5 That contrasted to immigrants from Germany which had a limit of 51 227 6 Repeal of quotas Edit The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 also known as the Hart Celler Act repealed the national quotas and subsequently there was a substantial increase in the number of immigrants from developing countries particularly in Africa and Asia This act also provided a separate category for refugees The act also provided greater opportunity for family reunification Diversity Immigrant Visa Edit The Diversity Visa Program or green card lottery is a program created by the Immigration Act of 1990 It allows people born in countries with low rates of immigration to the United States to obtain a lawful permanent resident status Each year 50 000 of those visas are distributed at random Almost 38 of those visas were attributed to African born immigrants in 2016 7 African born persons also represent the most numerous group among the applicants since 2013 8 The application is free of charge and the requirements in terms of education are either a high school diploma or two years of a professional experience requiring at least two years of training Recent migration trends and factors Edit African immigration to the U S by broad class of admissionThe continent of Africa has seen many changes in migrations patterns over the course of history 9 The graph below shows African immigration to the United States in 2016 based on class of admission with numbers from the Department of Homeland Security s Yearbook 10 The influx of African immigrants began in the latter part of the 20th century and is often referred to as the fourth great migration About three fourths of all out migration from Africa went to the United States after 1990 7 This trend began after decolonization as many Africans moved to the U S seeking an education and to escape poverty and has risen steadily over time The increase in the rate of migration is projected to continue for the coming decades 11 Originally these immigrants came with the sole purpose of advancing themselves before returning to their respective countries Nevertheless many immigrants never return In recent years there has been an increase in the number of African immigrants interested in gaining permanent residence in the U S this has led to a severe brain drain on the economies of African countries due to many skilled hard working Africans leaving Africa to seek their economic fortunes in the U S and elsewhere One major factor that contributes to migration from Africa to the United States is labor opportunities It has been relatively easier for African immigrants with advanced education to leave and enter international labor markets In addition many Africans move to the United States for advanced training For example doctors from different African nations would move to the U S in order to gain more economic opportunities compared to their home country 14 However as more Africans emigrate to the United States their reasoning and factors tend to become more complex 15 Many Africans who migrate to the United States return their income to Africa in the source of remittances In Nigeria for example remittances from Nigerians in the United States to Nigeria totaled to 6 1 billion in 2012 approximately 3 of Nigeria s GDP 12 The important role of remittances in improving the lives of family members in the United States has led to both migration and migrants remaining in the United States Following educational and economic trends of migration family reunification has driven recent trends of migration Family reunification refers to the ability of U S citizens to sponsor family members for immigration Sponsoring immediate family members and other family preferences led to 45 and 10 of all African immigration in 2016 respectively 13 Legal service organizations such as the African Advocacy Network aid in family members sponsoring new immigrants to the United States 14 Additionally refugees make up a large class of admission to the United States Recent crises in the Central African Republic South Sudan Nigeria and Burundi have been sources of migrants in recent years 15 With recent restrictions on refugee entrance to the United States refugees may face a harder time entering the United States Population EditAfrican immigrants US ancestries in the 2000 16 2010 17 American Community Survey from more than 1 000 people Ancestry 2000 2000 of U S population 2010 2010 of U S population African 1 183 316 16 negligible no data 1 676 413 17 negligible no data Algerian 8 752 16 negligible no data 14 716 18 negligible no data Angolan 1 642 16 negligible no data negligible no data Cameroonian 8 099 16 negligible no data 16 894 19 negligible no data Cape Verdean 77 103 16 negligible no data 95 003 17 negligible no data Congolese 5 488 of the Democratic Republic of the Congo 16 negligible no data 11 009 19 negligible no data Eastern Africans 2 129 16 negligible no data negligible no data Egyptian 142 832 16 negligible no data 197 000 17 negligible no data Eritrean 18 917 16 negligible no data negligible no data Ethiopian 68 001 16 negligible no data 202 715 17 negligible no data Gambian 3 035 16 negligible no data negligible no data Ghanaian 49 944 16 negligible no data 91 322 17 negligible no data Guinea 3 016 16 negligible no data negligible no data Ivorian 3 110 16 negligible no data negligible no data Kenyan 17 336 16 negligible no data 51 749 17 negligible no data Liberian 25 575 16 negligible no data 51 296 17 negligible no data Libyan 2 979 16 negligible no data negligible no data Malian 1 790 16 negligible no data negligible no data Moroccan 38 923 16 negligible no data 82 073 negligible no data Nigerian 162 938 16 negligible no data 264 550 17 negligible no data North African Berber 4 544 North Africans 3 217 Berbers 1 327 16 negligible no data Rwandan 1 480 16 negligible no data negligible no data Senegalese 6 124 16 negligible no data 11 369 17 negligible no data Sierra Leonean 12 410 16 negligible no data 16 929 17 negligible no data Somali 36 313 16 negligible no data 120 102 17 negligible no data South African 44 991 16 negligible no data 57 491 17 negligible no data Sudanese 14 458 16 negligible no data 42 249 17 negligible no data Tanzanian 2 921 16 negligible no data negligible no data Togolese 1 716 16 negligible no data negligible no data Tunisian 4 735 16 negligible no data negligible no data Ugandan 4 707 16 negligible no data 12 549 negligible no data Western African 6 810 16 negligible no data Zambian 1 500 16 negligible no data negligible no data Zimbabwean 4 521 16 negligible no data 7 323 17 negligible no data TOTAL More than 1 000 000 0 2 citation needed NA NADemographics EditMetros with largest African born population 2010 Census Metropolitan area African population of total metro populationWashington DC MD VA WV 171 000 2 9Minneapolis St Paul MN 70 100 1 3Atlanta GA 70 100 1 3Boston MA NH 61 600 1 3Baltimore Area MD 33 100 1 2New York NY 223 000 1 1Dallas Fort Worth TX 64 300 0 9Houston TX 56 100 0 9Greater Los Angeles Area 68 100 0 5San Francisco Bay Area 24 500 0 5The total immigrant population from Africa estimated for 2015 2019 was 2 256 700 20 The top counties were 1 Harris County TX 70 2002 Los Angeles County CA 59 9003 Bronx Borough NY 56 0004 Montgomery County MD 54 7005 Hennepin County MN 53 7006 Prince George s County MD 53 0007 Dallas County TX 46 7008 King County WA 42 5009 Cook County IL 42 10010 Franklin County OH 41 40011 Fairfax County VA 39 40012 Tarrant County TX 34 90013 Brooklyn Borough NY 32 50014 Gwinnett County GA 26 80015 Essex County NJ 26 70016 Suffolk County Mass 25 00017 Philadelphia County PA 25 00018 Queens Borough NY 24 70019 DeKalb County GA 24 50020 Maricopa County AZ 24 00021 Middlesex County Mass 23 50022 Fort Bend County TX 22 00023 Manhattan Borough NY 21 70024 Baltimore County MD 21 50025 Ramsey County MN 20 300It is estimated that the 2017 population of African immigrants to the United States was about 2 1 million 2 According to the Migration Policy Institute as of 2009 two thirds of the African immigrants were from either East or West Africa 21 Countries with the most immigrants to the U S are Nigeria Egypt Ethiopia Ghana South Africa Somalia Eritrea and Kenya Seventy five percent 75 of the African immigrants to the U S come from 12 of the 55 countries namely Nigeria Egypt Ghana Ethiopia South Africa Kenya Liberia Somalia Morocco Cape Verde Sierra Leone and Sudan including what is now the independent country of South Sudan which is based on the 2000 census data 22 Additionally according to the U S Census 55 of immigrants from Africa are male while 45 are female Age groups with the largest cohort of African born immigrants are 25 34 35 44 and 45 54 with 24 5 27 9 and 15 0 respectively 23 Africans typically congregate in urban areas moving to suburban areas over time They are also one of the groups who are least likely to live in racially segregated areas 24 25 The goals of Africans vary tremendously While some look to create new lives in the US some plan on using the resources and skills gained to go back and help their countries of origin Either way African communities contribute millions to the economies of Africa through remittances Ogbuagu 2013 found that Diasporic Nigerians across the globe reportedly remitted 21 billion N3 36 trillion Naira to the homeland in 2012 alone Immigrants from Africa once they arrive in the U S typically settle in heavily urban areas upon arrival Areas such as Washington DC New York Baltimore Philadelphia Houston Atlanta Los Angeles Boston Columbus and Minneapolis have heavy concentrations of African immigrant populations Often there are clusters of nationalities within these cities The longer African immigrants live in the United States the more likely they are to live in suburban areas In the San Francisco Bay Area there are officially 40 000 African immigrants although it has been estimated that the population is actually four times this number when considering undocumented immigrants The majority of these immigrants were born in Ethiopia Egypt Nigeria and South Africa African immigrants like many other immigrant groups are likely to establish and find success in small businesses Many Africans that have seen the social and economic stability that comes from ethnic enclaves such as Chinatowns have recently been establishing ethnic enclaves of their own at much higher rates to reap the benefits of such communities 26 Such examples include Little Ethiopia in Los Angeles and Little Senegal in New York City State territory Subsaharan Africanpopulation 2019 Census 27 Percentage Alabama 44 872 Alaska 2 200 28 Arizona 58 584 Arkansas 42 549 California 319 119 Colorado 56 591 Connecticut 38 138 Delaware 15 648 District of Columbia 20 108 Florida 161 983 Georgia 199 299 Hawaii 4 510 Idaho 3 243 Illinois 127 008 Indiana 61 567 Iowa 31 301 Kansas 26 179 Kentucky 38 745 Louisiana 45 340 Maine 14 674 Maryland 248 180 Massachusetts 149 753 Michigan 80 461 Minnesota 178 662 Mississippi 2 300 29 Missouri 54 003 Montana 2 760 Nebraska 28 566 Nevada 45 510 New Hampshire 8 701 New Jersey 122 485 New Mexico 6 826 New York 263 282 North Carolina 133 428 North Dakota 8 100 30 Ohio 137 487 Oklahoma 17 477 Oregon 24 159 Pennsylvania 131 704 Rhode Island 30 235 South Carolina 47 684 South Dakota 7 200 31 Tennessee 95 626 Texas 446 330 Utah 18 672 Vermont 2 400 32 Virginia 226 140 Washington 114 071 West Virginia 8 748 Wisconsin 32 632 Wyoming USA 2 millionEducational attainment EditMain article Model minority African immigrants to the US are among the most educated groups in the United States Some 48 9 percent of all African immigrants hold a college diploma This is more than double the rate of native born white Americans and nearly four times the rate of native born African Americans 33 According to the 2000 Census the rate of college diploma acquisition is highest among Egyptian Americans at 59 7 percent followed closely by Nigerian Americans at 58 6 percent 34 35 In 1997 19 4 percent of all adult African immigrants in the United States held a graduate degree compared to 8 1 percent of adult white Americans and 3 8 percent of adult black Americans in the United States respectively 36 According to the 2000 Census the percentage of Africans with a graduate degree is highest among Nigerian Americans at 28 3 percent followed by Egyptian Americans at 23 8 percent 34 35 Of the African born population in the US age 25 and older 87 9 reported having a high school degree or higher 37 compared with 78 8 of Asian born immigrants and 76 8 of European born immigrants respectively 38 Africans from Kenya 90 8 percent Nigeria 89 1 percent Ghana 85 9 percent Botswana 84 7 percent and Malawi 83 percent were the most likely to report having a high school degree or higher Those born in Cape Verde 44 8 percent and Mauritania 60 8 percent were the least likely to report having completed a high school education 39 Health EditU S immigrants that come from predominantly black nations in Africa are generally healthier than black immigrants from predominantly white nations or from Europe A study conducted by Jen nan Ghazal Read a sociology professor at the UC Irvine and Michael O Emerson a sociology professor at Rice University studied the health of more than 2 900 black immigrants from top regions of emigration the West Indies Africa South America and Europe Black people born in Africa and South America have been shown to be healthier than U S born black people 40 41 The study was published in the September issue of Social Forces and is the first to look at the health of black immigrants by their region of origin 42 Culture EditAfrican immigrants tend to retain their culture once in the United States Instead of abandoning their various traditions they find ways to reproduce and reinvent themselves 43 Cultural bonds are cultivated through shared ethnic or national affiliations Some organizations like the Ghanaian group Fantse Kuo and the Sudanese Association organize by country region or ethnic group Other nonprofits like the Malawi Washington Association 44 organize by national identity and are inclusive of all Malawians Other groups present traditional culture from a pan African perspective Using traditional skills and knowledge African born entrepreneurs develop services for immigrants and the community at large In the Washington area events such as the annual Ethiopian soccer tournament institutions such as the AME Church African Liberation Ministry and friends and sister cities organizations bring together different communities The extent to which African immigrants engage in these activities naturally varies according to the population Religion EditReligion of African born Americans 2020 45 Protestantism 55 Catholicism 20 Other Christian 8 Unaffiliated 8 Other Religion 10 The religious traditions of African immigrants tend to be pluralistic they are seen not only as religious institutions but in many cases also as civic centers These organizations are central to persevering ethnic identity among these communities 46 citation needed African immigrant religious communities are also central networks and provide services such as counseling shelter employment financial assistance health services and real estate tips Christianity Edit Further information Christianity in Africa African immigrants practice a diverse array of religions including Christianity Islam and various traditional African faiths Of these adherents the largest number are Pentecostals Charismatic Christians This form of Christianity is a primarily evangelical born again Pentecostal sect that emphasizes holiness fervent prayer charismatic revival proximate salvation speaking in tongues baptism of the Holy Spirit faith healing visions and divine revelations 46 Among popular denominational churches are the Brotherhood of the Cross and Star Seventh Day Adventist Church Celestial Church of Christ Cherubim and Seraphim Christ Apostolic Church Church of Pentecost Deeper Life Bible Church Mountain of Fire and Miracle Ministries MFM the Presbyterian Church of Ghana the Redeemed Christian Church of God and 46 citation needed Christ Embassy Additionally Ethiopians and Eritreans have their own churches wherever there is a significant Ethiopian or Eritrean population Their churches are mainly Ethiopian or Eritrean Orthodox and a few Catholic churches Continental African churches Edit Further information African initiated church Many African communities have created their own churches in the United States modeled on continental African churches Many African churches are Pan African but some consist only of nationals from the country of origin This allows for worship in the native languages of the congregation Islam Edit Further information Islam in Africa Muslim immigrants from nations in Africa adhere to diverse Islamic traditions These include various Sunni Shia and Sufi mainstream orders and schools madhhab from West Africa the Swahili Coast the Indian Ocean islands the Horn of Africa and North Africa Cultural influence EditTelevision Edit Many local cable channels are now purchasing programming channels operated by various African communities For example the Africa Channel is broadcast in the United States through Comcast Charter Communications Cox Communications and also available in Jamaica the Bahamas Trinidad amp Tobago St Lucia Barbados Bermuda Grenada and other islands throughout the Caribbean 47 The channel is a showcase for outstanding travel lifestyle and cultural series specials and documentaries These programs feature people of African descent and their stories The network s premiere on September 1 2005 marked a milestone in U S television history For the first time American audiences were able to experience the successes celebrations and challenges of people living throughout Africa and the Diaspora all via a general entertainment network The network is broadcast in the U S through national distribution deals with the largest cable MSOs in the country including Comcast Charter and Cox TV news services such as the Nigerian Television Authority South African Broadcasting Channel and Ethiopian Television Programming are also available in some areas Restaurants Edit Immigrants from Africa have opened restaurants in urban areas The DC Atlanta and NYC Metro areas host many eateries belonging to the Liberian Senegalese Nigerian Ethiopian Tanzanian South African and other communities Music Edit The New York Times and academic scholar Nnamdi O Madichie have credited American African artists Kelela and Akon for employing fluidity of their cultural heritage through their U S and African identities Recently academic scholars have brought attention to the influence of African American music on U S culture According to ethnomusicologist Portia Maultsby African immigrant artists have impacted the U S through fashion and mainstream music by utilizing their cultural heritage as a foundation for their artistry In Marketing Senegal through hip hop a discourse analysis of Akon s music and lyrics Madichie cites Senegalese American singer Akon as a first generation African immigrant musician whose music and lyrics create a confluence of West Africa styled vocals mixed with North America s East Coast and Southern beats 48 In Mama Africa and Senegal Akon builds connections between Diasporic communities and the homeland through his music 48 An examination of the role of Black American entrepreneurs in the hip hop industry suggests that young Black people have been able to influence the White dominated music industry through transforming Blackness into capital staffing and business connections 49 The New York Times article 25 Songs That Tell Us Where Music Is Going illustrates how African immigrants have used their heritage to influence a new sound of mainstream music in the U S 50 Wortham cites Kelela an Ethiopian American musician as an American African immigrant who has impacted U S culture by defying the notion that Blackness is monolithic through music that pushes the boundaries of R amp B in uninhibited experimentation 50 Ethnomusicologist Mellonee Burnim s area of aesthetic significance are style of delivery sound quality and mechanics of delivery qualities common to African derived music 51 Style of delivery is one of the most important aspects of Africanisms in music This refers to the stage presentation and physical appearance of when music is performed 52 Physical appearance is a fundamental part of the Black cultural expression in regard to African American music The sways and sashays as well as the physical appearance of African immigrant musicians has a significant influence on U S culture exemplified through fashion trends 52 Along with style of delivery sound quality is another significant tradition of Black music that derives from Africanisms 53 The sound quality of African American music distinguishes itself because of its African sentiments that are foreign to Western patterns 52 Maultsby describes how in Africa and the black diaspora black musicians have managed to cultivate an array of unique sounds that imitate nature animals spirits and speech into their music 51 Mechanics of delivery involves improvisation of time text and pitch to deliver Black audiences a variety in performances 54 Textures can be increased through solo voices or adding layers of handclaps This technique described as staggered entrances derives from the improvised singing of slaves 54 Time is another basic component that can be expanded by extending the length of notes Finally pitch produces juxtaposing voices of different ranges in a single voice 51 Visibility EditNotable African academics in the U S include full tenured professors at the nation s top universities including at MIT Elfatih A B Eltahir from Sudan 55 at Caltech 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry Winner Ahmed Zewail from Egypt at Yale professor Lamin Sanneh 56 from Gambia at Pennsylvania State University professor Augustin Banyaga from Rwanda at Harvard professors Jacob Olupona 57 from Nigeria Barack Obama Sr from Kenya Emmanuel K Akyeampong from Ghana 58 Biodun Jeyifo from Nigeria 58 and John Mugane from Kenya 58 and at Princeton Adel Mahmoud 59 from Egypt Wole Soboyejo 60 from Nigeria Simon Gikandi 61 from Kenya V Kofi Agawu from Ghana 62 and Kwame Anthony Appiah from Ghana In sports Hakeem Olajuwon Dikembe Mutombo Darlington Nagbe and Freddy Adu are prominent Academy Award winning actress Charlize Theron entrepreneur Elon Musk and Grammy Award winning musician Dave Matthews are all white South Africans and two time Academy Award nominated actor Djimon Hounsou and Grammy winning musician Angelique Kidjo both from Benin and recently Lupita Nyong o and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie are most notable Notable people of African ancestry EditThe following is a list of notable people of Sub Saharan African ancestry Academia and science Edit Claude Ake Nigerian professor at Yale University Emmanuel K Akyeampong Ghanaian professor of history at Harvard University Kwame Anthony Appiah British born Ghanaian national born to a Ghanaian father and British mother philosopher and writer professor of philosophy at Princeton University 2012 National Humanities Medal winner 63 Augustin Banyaga Rwandan professor at Pennsylvania State University Elias Zerhouni Algerian former director of the National Institutes of Health Kwabena Boahen Ghanaian professor of bioengineering Stanford University 64 65 Abbas El Gamal Egyptian American electrical engineer educator and entrepreneur the recipient of the 2012 Claude E Shannon Award Taher ElGamal Egyptian American cryptographer inventor of the ElGamal discrete log cryptosystem and the ElGamal signature scheme Mostafa El Sayed Egyptian American U S National Medal of Science laureate leading nanoscience researcher known for the spectroscopy rule named after him the El Sayed rule Farouk El Baz Egyptian American space scientist who worked with NASA to assist in the planning of scientific exploration of the Moon Mohammed Adam El Sheikh Sudanese executive director of the Fiqh Council of North America 66 Bisi Ezerioha Nigerian automotive engineer racecar driver and industrialist Hany Farid Professor of computer science at Dartmouth College pioneer in Digital forensics Egyptian Simon Gikandi Kenyan professor at Princeton University Sossina M Haile Ethiopian fuel cell engineer Essam Heggy Egyptian American Planetary scientist Fatima Jibrell Somali environmentalist Abdul Kallon Sierra Leonean US District Judge for the Northern District of Alabama 67 Ave Kludze Ghanaian senior NASA spacecraft systems engineer Nawal M Nour Sudanese obstetrician and gynecologist 2003 Genius Award winner 68 John Ogbu Nigerian professor at University of California at Berkeley Noureddine Melikechi Algerian American Atomic Molecular and Optical Physicist member of the Mars Science Laboratory Niyi Osundare Nigerian professor at University of New Orleans Ato Quayson Ghanaian professor of literature Stanford University Said Sheikh Samatar Somali historian Lamin Sanneh Gambian professor at Yale University Jem Spectar Cameroonian president of the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown 69 Ahmed Tewfik Egyptian American electrical engineer Professor and college administrator Victor Ukpolo Nigerian chancellor of Southern University at New Orleans Kwasi Wiredu Ghanaian distinguished university professor of philosophy at the Department of Philosophy in the University of South Florida 70 Paul Tiyambe Zeleza Case Western Reserve University Ahmed Zewail Egyptian winner of 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry professor at California Institute of TechnologyPolitics Edit Muna Khalif Somali fashion designer and politician MP in the Federal Parliament of Somalia Mohamed Mahmoud Ould Mohamedou Mauritanian scholar and politician former Minister of Foreign Affairs and Cooperation of Mauritania Joe Neguse Eritrean American politician first Eritrean American elected to the United States Congress and Colorado s first congressman of African descent Barack Obama Sr Kenyan immigrant who fathered the 44th President of the United States Ilhan Omar Somali incumbent U S Representative for Minnesota s 5th congressional district Dina Powell Egyptian current U S Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategy Abakar z Zaid decorated veteran of the U S Marines there are many others Africans serving in the 6 branches of the Armed Forces TV and film Edit Cynthia Addai Robinson Ghanaian Michael Blackson Ghanaian actor and comedian Monica Owusu Breen Ghanaian American TV producer and screenwriter work includes Lost Brothers amp Sisters Alias and Fringe Akosua Busia Ghanaian played Nettie in Academy Award nominated film The Color Purple Edi Gathegi Kenyan Danai Gurira American of Zimbabwean descent Sanaa Hamri Moroccan film director Djimon Hounsou Beninese two time Academy Award nominated actor Rami Malek American of Egyptian descent Academy Award winning actor Peter Mensah Ghanaian Lupita Nyong o Mexican Kenyan Academy Award winning actress Omar Sharif Egyptian Golden Globe winning actor Cliff Simon South African Charlize Theron South African Academy Award winning actress Arnold Vosloo South African Ramy Youssef American of Egyptian descent actor and comedian Vanessa Mdee Tanzanian singer songwriter Trevor Noah South African comedianSports Edit Ezekiel Ansah Ghanaian NFL football Joseph Addai Ghanaian NFL football born in Houston to Ghanaian parents Gale Agbossoumonde Togo by way of Benin soccer Kevin Anderson South Africa tennis Joshua Clottey Ghanaian professional boxer Luol Deng South Sudanese NBA basketball Charlie Davies half Gambian soccer born in New Hampshire Maurice Edu Nigerian parents soccer born in the Inland Empire of California Ebenezer Ekuban Ghanaian NFL football Joel Embiid Cameroonian NBA basketball Festus Ezeli Nigerian NBA basketball Serge Ibaka Republic of the Congo NBA basketball Andre Iguodala half Nigerian basketball born in Springfield Illinois Meb Keflezighi Eritrean runner Kofi Kingston Ghanaian professional wrestling Mathias Kiwanuka Ugandan NFL Football Nana Kuffour Ghanaian soccer Bernard Lagat Kenyan runner Nazr Mohammed Ghanaian parents NBA basketball player born in Chicago Luc Mbah a Moute Cameroonian NBA basketball Dikembe Mutombo D R Congo NBA basketball Danny Mwanga D R Congo soccer player Prince Nana Ghanaian professional wrestler born in the US to Ghanaian parents Emeka Okafor Nigerian NBA basketball player born in Houston to Nigerian parents Betty Okino Ugandan gymnastics Amobi Okoye Nigerian football player Hakeem Olajuwon Nigerian NBA basketball player Henry Rono Kenyan professional runner Robbie Russell Ghanaian soccer player Pascal Siakam Cameroonian NBA basketball player Tony Tchani Cameroonian soccer player Hasheem Thabeet Tanzanian NBA basketball player Jean Pierre Tokoto Cameroonian soccer player Masai Ujiri Nigerian NBA basketball general manager Kamaru Usman Nigerian mixed martial artist UFC Welterweight Champion Madieu Williams Sierra Leonean NFL football player Gedion Zelalem Ethiopian soccer playerBusiness Edit Roelof Botha South African former chief financial officer of PayPal Kase Lukman Lawal Nigerian chairman and chief executive officer CAMAC Holdings Elon Musk South African co founder of PayPal SpaceX and Tesla Motors CEO and CTO of SpaceX CEO and product architect of Tesla Motors chairman of SolarCityFashion Edit Amsale Aberra Ethiopian fashion designer Iman Somali fashion and cosmetics entrepreneur former supermodel Kiara Kabukuru Ugandan supermodel Maria Borges Angolan Supermodel Liya Kebede Ethiopian supermodel actress and philanthropist Nana Meriwether South African born 71 72 half South African and half African American Miss Maryland USA 2012 Miss USA 2012 first runner up Oluchi Onweagba Nigerian model Alek Wek South Sudanese supermodel and designer Herieth Paul Tanzanian model Virgil Abloh Ghanaian American fashion designerJournalism and literature Edit Chimamanda Adichie Nigerian author winner of 2008 MacArthur Fellowship Genius Grant 2007 Orange Prize and 2005 Commonwealth Writer s Prize Selamawi Asgedom Ethiopian and Eritrean author Folasade Olayinka Baderinwa known professionally as Sade Baderinwa Teju Cole Nigerian American novelist writer photographer and art historian Hoda Kotb Egyptian broadcast journalist and TV host on Dateline NBC and the Today Show Dinaw Mengestu Ethiopian author Charles Mudede Zimbabwean filmmaker and film critic Micere Mugo Kenyan poet and writer Toluse Olorunnipa Nigerian American Laila Lalami Pulitzer Prize nominated Moroccan novelist journalist essayist and professor journalist Stephen Adly Guirgis Pulitzer Prize winning Egyptian American playwright Catherine Filloux French Algerian American playwright Ngũgĩ wa Thiong o Kenyan poet and writer Mona Eltahawy Egyptian American Feminist and independent journalist Wole Soyinka Nigerian writer Maaza Mengiste Ethiopian American writerSee also Edit United States portal Africa portalAfrican immigration to Canada African immigration to Europe African immigration to Latin America Emigration from Africa History of Africans in Baltimore Migrants African routes North Africans in the United StatesReferences Edit Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported 2010 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on 18 January 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2012 a b Solomon Salem February 17 2017 Sub Saharan African Population on Rise in US Voice of America Retrieved 26 February 2017 David E Kyoso Immigrants in the United States Godfrey Mwakikagile 2010 p 110 Kimiko de Freytas Tamura January 13 2023 African and Invisible The Other New York Migrant Crisis The New York Times Retrieved January 26 2023 Bashi V 2004 July 4 Globalizing Anti Blackness Transnationalzing Western Immigration law policy and practice Retrieved May 1 2010 from Ethnic and Racial Studies http www arts yorku ca soci goldring 4390 readings pdf bashi globalized anti blackness pdf permanent dead link George Mason University 1998 Who was Shut Out Immigration Quotas 1925 1927 Retrieved May 1 2010 from History Matters http historymatters gmu edu d 5078 Archived 2015 12 16 at the Wayback Machine Table 10 Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status By Broad Class Of Admission And Region And Country Of Birth Fiscal Year 2016 Department of Homeland Security 2017 05 16 Retrieved 2018 03 03 Diversity Visa Program Statistics travel state gov Retrieved 2018 03 03 Collyer Michael ed Emigration nations Policies and ideologies of emigrant engagement Springer 2013 Table 10 Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status By Broad Class Of Admission And Region And Country Of Birth Fiscal Year 2016 Department of Homeland Security 2017 05 16 Retrieved 2018 03 03 The Economist March 28th 2020 page 6 The Nigerian Diaspora in the United States Migration Policy Institute June 2015 Table 10 Persons Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status By Broad Class Of Admission And Region And Country Of Birth Fiscal Year 2016 Department of Homeland Security 2017 05 16 Retrieved 2018 03 03 African Advocacy Network African Advocacy Network Retrieved 2018 03 03 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Africa UNHCR Retrieved 2018 03 03 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Table 1 First Second and Total Responses to the Ancestry Question by Detailed Ancestry Code 2000 US Census Bureau Retrieved 2010 12 02 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Total ancestry categories tallied for people with one or more ancestry categories reported 2010 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on 18 January 2015 Retrieved 30 November 2012 Citizenship Status in the United States Total population in the United States 2006 2010 American Community Survey Selected Population Tables US Census Bureau Archived from the original on 2020 02 12 Retrieved 2013 12 06 a b Place of Birth for the Foreign Born Population in the United States Universe Foreign born population excluding population born at sea 2007 2011 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Retrieved 16 July 2013 dead link U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2022 02 23 McCabe Kristen African immigrants in the United States Washington DC Migration Policy Institute 2011 Otiso Kefa 11 June 2007 African Immigrants a Successful Bunch But Not Overall MShale news Archived from the original on 22 June 2007 Retrieved 30 October 2016 US Census Bureau People Born in Africa Logan John Deane Glenn 15 August 2003 Black Diversity in Metropolitan America Lewis Mumford Center Retrieved 30 October 2016 How African Americans and African Immigrants Differ The Globalist 16 November 2013 Retrieved 18 March 2015 African immigrants hope for a Chicago community of their own Chicago Tribune 14 January 2013 Retrieved 14 July 2013 2019 Census Retrieved 2021 05 08 U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2022 02 23 U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2022 02 23 U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2022 02 23 U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2022 02 23 U S Immigrant Population by State and County migrationpolicy org 2014 02 04 Retrieved 2022 02 23 African Immigrants in the United States are the Nation s Most Highly Educated Group The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education No 26 Winter 1999 2000 pp 60 61 doi 10 2307 2999156 a b Table FBP 1 Profile of Selected Demographic and Social Characteristics 2000 Population Universe People Born in Nigeria Geographic Area United States PDF census gov a b Table FBP 1 Profile of Selected Demographic and Social Characteristics 4113 Population Universe People Born in Egypt Geographic Area United States PDF census gov African Immigrants in the United States have the highest rate of education The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education No 26 Winter 1999 2000 pp 60 61 doi 10 2307 2999156 Demographics and Statistics of Immigrants Asian Nation Asian American History Demographics amp Issues Asian Nation Retrieved 2010 11 08 Characteristics of the African Born in the United States Migration Policy Institute January 2006 Dixon D 2006 Characteristics of the African Born in the United States Migration Policy Institute January 2006 Black immigrants from Africa arrive healthier than those from Europe From MedicineWorld Org Retrieved 18 March 2015 Today UCI Press Releases Project MUSE Retrieved 18 March 2015 Olupona J K amp Gemignani R Eds 2007 African Immigrant Religion in America New York New York University Press Malawi Washington Association Faith Among Black Americans 2 Religious affiliation and congregations Pew Research Center February 16 2021 a b c Olupona amp Gemignani 2007 About Us The Africa Channel Retrieved 2019 07 08 a b Madichie Nnamdi O 2011 07 26 Marketing Senegal through hip hop a discourse analysis of Akon s music and lyrics Journal of Place Management and Development 4 2 169 197 doi 10 1108 17538331111153179 ISSN 1753 8335 Edmondson V 2008 A preliminary review of competitive reactions in the hip hop music industry Black American entrepreneurs in a new industry Management Research News Vol 31 No 9 pp 637 649 a b Abebe Nitsuh ed March 9 2017 25 Songs That Tell Us Where Music Is Going New York Times Retrieved September 2 2018 a b c Maultsby Portia 1997 Africanisms in African American Music In A Turbulent Voyage Readings in African American Studies Sand Diego CA Collegiate Press pp 163 ISBN 9780939693269 a b c Maultsby Portia 1997 Africanisms in African American Music In A Turbulent Voyage Readings in African American Studies Sand Diego CA Collegiate Press pp 162 ISBN 9780939693269 Maultsby Portia 1997 Africanisms in African American Music In A Turbulent Voyage Readings in African American Studies Sand Diego CA Collegiate Press pp 164 ISBN 9780939693269 a b Maultsby Portia 1997 Africanisms in African American Music In A Turbulent Voyage Readings in African American Studies 2nd ed pp 158 174 Sand Diego CA Collegiate Press Sand Diego CA Collegiate Press pp 167 ISBN 9780939693269 Eltahir CV Retrieved 18 March 2015 Welcome Archived from the original on 1 November 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Jacob K Olupona Retrieved 18 March 2015 a b c Department of African and African American Studies Archived from the original on 2012 04 16 Retrieved 2012 03 05 Princeton University Adel Mahmoud Archived from the original on 2015 03 10 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Soboyejo Princeton University Mechanical amp Aerospace Engineering Retrieved 18 March 2015 Comparative Literature Retrieved 18 March 2015 Princeton University Department of Music Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Retrieved 18 March 2015 Princeton University Appiah awarded National Humanities Medal Retrieved 18 March 2015 Kwabena Boahen Stanford edu Retrieved 2010 11 08 Faculty Department of Bioengineering Stanford University School of Medicine and School of Engineering Bioengineering stanford edu 2008 06 20 Archived from the original on 2010 06 16 Retrieved 2010 11 08 Leader Named at Mosque The Washington Post Retrieved 18 March 2015 Abdul Kallon Fjc gov Retrieved 2015 07 14 A Conversation With Nawal Nour A Life Devoted to Stopping The Suffering of Mutilation The New York Times Claudia Dreifus July 11 2000 President of the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown Kwasi Wiredu Usf edu Retrieved 2015 07 14 More on Miss USA Maryland Nana Meriwether tribunedigital baltimoresun Retrieved 18 March 2015 Nana Meriwether Sidwell Friends grad is first runner up at Miss USA updated The Washington Post 4 June 2012 External links EditNew York Times Tastes of Nigeria Sounds of Sierra Leone New York Times Bronx Beyond the Yankees and the Zoo New York Times Solace From a Multiethnic Tapestry Oakland Tribune Black immigrants The invisible model minority Remittances and in kind products as agency for community development and anti poverty sustainability Making a case for Diasporic Nigerians Ogbuagu B C 2013 International Journal of Development and Sustainability 2 3 1828 1857 Online ISSN 2186 8662 www isdsnet com ijds ISDS Article ID IJDS13052905 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title African immigration to the United States amp oldid 1163149528, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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