When Minnesota was a new state, thousands of settlers arrived, many of them from Europe. But in recent decades, the state has attracted large numbers of Hmong and Somali refugees. There are also thousands of people from India, Ethiopia, the Philippines, Mexico and the People’s Republic of China living in Minnesota.
The state has become more racially diverse in the last 10 years, and demographers said that's especially true among children. About 83 percent of Minnesotans were white, non-Hispanic for the 2010 census, compared to 88 percent in 2000.
June 17, 2003 -
July 8, 2003 - Mainstreet Radio’s Erin Galbally looks into divorce in the Hmong communtity. Some Hmong say it's allowing women in particular to escape difficult marriages. But traditionalists worry about the long-term impact of the new trend on Hmong culture.
July 10, 2003 -
July 16, 2003 - Four undocumented immigrants may be denied kidney transplants by Hennepin County Medical Center because they don't have the money to pay for the operations. The state Human Services department estimates that over 21-hundred immigrants are losing General Assistance Medical Care because of stricter eligibility requirements regarding legal immigrant status. Dr. Steve Miles is a professor with the Center for Bioethics in the University of Minnesota's Department of Medicine. He says the fact the patients are illegal immigrants should have no bearing on their ability to receive healthcare.
July 23, 2003 - MPR’s Nikki Tundel interviews Michele Garnett McKenzie, director of the Refugee and Immigrant Program at Minnesota Advocates for Human Rights, about newly released figures show Minnesota's largest minority groups are making significant economic strides. McKenzie says over the last few decades the state has become a magnet for the county's newest residents.
July 23, 2003 - MPR’s Art Hughes reports that new information released by the U.S. Census gives a more detailed look at the state's Hmong population. When the Census was taken in 2000, Hmong Minnesotan's held jobs, but a third of them lived below the federal poverty line. The majority of Hmong are foreign-born, but over 30 percent are born in the state.
July 29, 2003 - New federal data shows the AIDS rate is up for the first time in 10 years. In 2002, the number of Americans diagnosed with AIDS increased 2.2-percent. The news is worse in Minnesota. The number of new AIDS cases here rose 6-percent in 2002, largely due to new infections among African immigrants. Bob Tracy is the director of community affairs and education at the Minnesota AIDS Project. He says it's important to pay attention to national trends. But he says Minnesotans should also be aware of what's happening in their own backyard.
July 29, 2003 - All Things Considered’s Greta Cunningham talks with Lee Pao Xiong, a local leader in the Hmong community, about housing issues in Twin Cities. Xiong states housing is the foundation for everything.
August 1, 2003 - As peacekeeping troops wait to enter Liberia, there's another, less visible group, waiting in the wings in the United States. As MPR’s Rob Schmitz reports, many young Liberians are in school receiving training, and developing skills that they hope they can use to rebuild their homeland.
August 8, 2003 -