Skip to content
All posts

Citizenship Status for the Foreign Born | Demographic Glossary

Citizenship Status for the Foreign Born

Definition

For individuals born outside the United States, this classifies whether they are a U.S. citizen (e.g., by naturalization or by birth abroad to U.S. parents) or not a U.S. citizen.

Why It Matters

Citizenship status often correlates with levels of integration, rights, access to services, and socio-economic stability. It impacts political participation, eligibility for public benefits, and long-term residency patterns within a country.

Specific Relevance for Professionals:

Marketers
Refines targeting for services related to legal status, financial services for immigrants, or products that appeal to different levels of integration into U.S. society. Citizenship status can influence purchasing power and long-term consumer behavior.

Researchers
Critical for studying immigrant integration, access to healthcare and education, political participation, and socio-economic outcomes, providing a nuanced understanding of the foreign-born population beyond just their place of birth.

Consultants
Useful for advising clients on services targeting immigrant communities, particularly those offering legal, financial, or integration support. It helps assess market segments based on legal residency status and associated needs.

Public Policy Workers
Paramount for immigration policy, social welfare program design, voter registration efforts, and understanding the eligibility and needs of different segments of the foreign-born population for public services.

Explore this dataset in Cambium AI