<i>‘This book is a valuable addition to the literature on contemporary immigration trends in the US and Australia and the role of economic factors in influencing these trends. The various chapters show that economic migrants are affected by, and respond to, changes in labour market conditions, but specific outcomes vary and are also dependent on other (non-economic) factors. Similarly, other factors besides economic conditions determine immigration policies and politics in the two countries. The book’s narratives and empirical analyses of what happened to immigration and immigrants during the financial crisis years of 2008-2009 in the two countries constitute an important record of the two countries’ immigration experience during those years.’</i>
- Siew-Ean Khoo, Journal of Population Research,