English, asked by shraddha749, 3 months ago

essay on "DV lottery and its effects in Nepal"​

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Answered by smart15676
19

Answer:

>immigration bill that doesn't end the diversity visa program and shift the U.S.'s family-based immigration system to a "merit-based" one. Currently, legal residents and citizens can petition for close family members to receive visa benefits, a process which two out of three immigrants who come to the U.S. use.Although CU does not track the specific visa types of its employees, many who work in Housing and Dining Services benefit from the diversity visa and family reunification programs.In 2010, Subedi and her family arrived in the city that many immigrants had come to before: New York City. From there, they settled in Boulder, where they had family and a Nepali community to connect with. Since 2004, Boulder has declared the third Sunday of April as Nepal Day in recognition of the sizable Nepali communityImmigration has been a staple of American culture, synthesized in the popular description of American as "a nation of immigrants."

>The United States Citizenship and Immigration Services recently removed the phrase from its mission statement, opting for emphasizing its role in "protecting Americans, securing the homeland." The Trump administration is now charting a course for a dramatic reduction in legal immigration, and with it, a shift in the economic and cultural fabric of America, say immigrants and experts at CU.

After a Diversity Visa beneficiary from Uzbekistan allegedly rammed a truck into a crowded lower Manhattan bike path killing eight this past Halloween, President Trump set his sights on eliminating the program.

Trump told Congress he won't sign any

Immigration bill that doesn't end the diversity

>At first, Kushalta Subedi didn't want to come to America. Her friends, family and life were all in Nepal-to her, America was just a big, mostly white, unknown.Now a sophomore at CU and a U.S. citizen, she is trying to reconcile her place in a country she loves with a president that says the diversity visa lottery her family benefited from allows in "the worst of the worst."

>The diversity visa lottery offers 50,000 visas to randomly selected, prescreened candidates from countries with low immigration to the U.S. In 2015, the most recent year data is provided, people from Nepal received the highest number of diversity visas, according to analysis by the American Immigration Council. Over 2,700 Nepalese people, like Subedi and her family, have settled in Colorado.

Explanation:

> means new paragraph

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