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Rakesh Khurana (born 1967), dean of Harvard College [4]; Neeli Bendapudi (born 1962), president of University of Louisville [5]; Jamshed Bharucha (born 1956), former president of Cooper Union, (2011–2015); former dean of arts & sciences at Dartmouth College and former provost at Tufts University
The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965 dramatically opened entry to the U.S. to immigrants other than traditional Northern European groups, which would significantly alter the demographic mix in the U.S. [49] Not all Indian Americans came directly from India; some moved to the U.S. via Indian communities in other countries, including the ...
Usha Bala Chilukuri [4] [b] was born in a suburb of San Diego County, California, [7] on January 6, 1986, [2] to Telugu Indian immigrants. [8] [9] Her father is a mechanical engineer from IIT Madras and a lecturer at San Diego State University, [10] [11] and her mother is a molecular biologist and provost at the University of California, San Diego. [12]
In Australia, Indian Australians and India were the largest source of new permanent migrants to Australia in 2017–2018, [248] and Indians were the most educated migrant group in Australia with 54.6% of Indian migrants in Australia holding a bachelor's or higher educational degree, which is more than three times Australia's national average of ...
U.S. courts classified Indians as both white and non-white through a number of cases. In 1909, Bhicaji Balsara became the first Indian to gain U.S. citizenship. As a Parsi, he was ruled to be "the purest of Aryan type" and "as distinct from Hindus as are the English who dwell in India". Thirty years later, the same Circuit Court to accept ...
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During World War II, more than 400,000 American soldiers were sent to India. [3]After the end of British colonial rule in India in 1947, the "colonial third culture" surrounding employment, which featured expatriates in superior roles, natives in subordinate roles, and little informal socialisation between the two, began to be replaced with a "co-ordinate third culture", based around the ...
Indians in the New York City metropolitan area constitute one of the largest and fastest-growing ethnicities in the New York City metropolitan area of the United States. The New York City region is home to the largest and most prominent Indian American population among metropolitan areas by a significant margin, enumerating 711,174 uniracial individuals based on the 2013–2017 U.S. Census ...