UB launches Immigrant and Refugee Research Institute

Release Date: July 11, 2014 This content is archived.

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Hilary Weaver.

Hilary Weaver

Wooksoo Kim.

Wooksoo Kim

“Refugees who found their home in Buffalo are a valuable asset to the city. ”
Wooksoo Kim, co-director of IRRI
University at Buffalo

BUFFALO, N.Y. – For decades, Buffalo’s population has shrunk. But the city’s number of immigrants and refugees are on the rise.

With the sudden population surge come a host of problems. The University at Buffalo will tackle these issues through the Immigrant and Refugee Research Institute (IRRI), a new institute under the School of Social Work and Buffalo Center for Social Research.

IRRI will work to improve the lives of immigrants and refugees in Western New York through research on issues involving the welfare of newcomers. The institute will also offer support to newcomer students and provide research data to local organizations.

“I think there’s power in bringing people together,” says Hilary Weaver, IRRI co-director and associate professor in the School of Social Work. “We envision IRRI as an umbrella where scholars, community members and people from various human services can gather together around research and service needs. We will be the bridge between the university and the community.”

Immigrants and refugees are the only growing segment of the Buffalo population. Ten years ago, one might have found three Burmese people in Buffalo. That number has ballooned to 8,000 people, says Weaver.

Refugees are placed in U.S. cities based on which have the available infrastructure to support new residents. Buffalo, says Weaver, is an ideal location for newcomers due to the city’s ample stock of homes – particularly in the city’s West Side – and numerous supportive social agencies.

Wooksoo Kim, also IRRI co-director and associate professor in the School of Social Work, adds that increasingly stringent immigration policies in Canada have closed the nation for some newcomers, leaving Buffalo as a close alternative.

However, Kim believes that the boom in immigrant and refugee populations is an opportunity for Buffalo. Kim and Weaver look to the city of Utica as a model for economic resurgence through newcomer resettlement.

“Refugees who found their home in Buffalo are a valuable asset to the city,” says Kim. “In order to help them realize their economic and cultural potentials, we must be clear in our commitment to these people. Research is an essential tool to guide such actions.”

To learn more about IRRI, visit socialwork.buffalo.edu/social-research/institutes-centers/.

Media Contact Information

Marcene Robinson is a former staff writer in University Communications. To contact UB's media relations staff, email ub-news@buffalo.edu or visit our list of current university media contacts.