Social Issues

Allegiance to one's country carries different meanings for different people in the inter-connected global world. We explore how family relationships, jobs and political perspective factor into our allegiances.
Mexico is opening a new consulate in St. Paul next month. The office will serve the thousands of Mexicans living in Minnesota, the Dakotas and northern Wisconsin. But Mexicans aren't the only ones celebrating.
St. Paul school district officials are trying to spice up their lunch menu to satisfy the tastes of an increasingly diverse student population.
The United States has always been a nation of immigrants. From the beginning, it has been molded by the push and pull of political, economic, and social upheaval and opportunity. U.S. policy and global events have combined with the migratory nature of humankind to draw and redraw the image of the nation and the global faces of Minnesota.
Ethnic Oromos are building a thriving community in Minnesota. But they remain at odds with their fellow Ethiopian countrymen over human rights abuses in their homeland.
Armin Budimlic grew up in the city of Prijedor, located in the northwestern corner of Bosnia-Herzegovina.
Michael Amoako is from Accra, the capitol city of Ghana. He's 28 years old, and he lives in Golden Valley with his wife and 6-month-old son.
Someone once said, when China sneezes, the world catches a cold. You can play on that phrase any number of ways when you set out to create a portrait of Minnesota's global face. The state is the new home to thousands of immigrants from countries in Africa, Asia Central America and Europe.
One face of globalization is the never-ending search by business for markets and profit in every corner of the world. The nonprofit group Global Volunteers puts another face on globalization.
Many immigrants come to the U.S. with little money or little education -- but not all. Of the 2.6 million people who immigrated to the U.S. between 2000 and 2003, 36 percent had a college education. Nearly 12 percent held advanced degrees. But still, many were not able to find work matching their education or skill levels.