How Migrant Clubs Help People in the U.S. and in Immigrants’ Homelands
Also known as hometown associations, they raise money by holding member breakfasts, raffles, and other events.
March 26, 2024 | Read Time: 3 minutes
“Hometown associations,” also known as migrant clubs, are nonprofits formed by immigrants who are originally from the same place in their country of origin. They serve as channels through which immigrants make charitable gifts that help people settle in their new country while also aiding communities back in their homelands. Many were created in the 1990s.
Mexican hometown associations are the most widely established.
But Turkish, Indian, Filipino, Guatemalan, Salvadoran, Ethiopian, Bolivian, Colombian, and Dominican immigrants, among others, have created them, too.
Why Hometown Associations Matter
I’m a scholar of philanthropy who has recently studied the Mexican hometown associations that support causes on both sides of the U.S. southern border.
In particular, I researched the associations that make up the Federación de Clubes Unidos Zacatecanos en Illinois.
This federation, formed by immigrants from towns in the Mexican state of Zacatecas who moved to Illinois, includes 15 active associations. Each has between 20 and 500 members.
Since 1995, these nonprofits have helped newly arrived Mexican immigrants in the communities where they now live and residents of their original Zacatecan hometowns. For example, they help Mexican American students in Illinois pay for college, as well as chip in to cover some higher-ed costs for Mexican students back in Zacatecas.
The associations also contribute to projects that benefit their communities back in Zacatecas. Examples include paving roads, establishing athletic fields, installing electricity, increasing access to clean water, and building everything from churches to health clinics.
The groups raise money by holding member breakfasts, mariachi concerts, raffles, and other events in Chicago and elsewhere in Illinois. Their fundraisers can generate anywhere from a couple of thousand dollars to tens of thousands annually.
Many of these groups have informal origins. Some got their start when immigrants were gathering for other reasons, such as taking part in local soccer and baseball games. Today, most hometown associations remain led by volunteers.
Even with volunteer leadership, in the Mexican case, these associations have adopted more formal approaches to their operations over the years. They gather in local community centers, which they often own.
Collective Remittances
Hometown associations are an example of what’s known as collective remittances, the technical term for immigrants pooling money earned abroad and sending it back to their homelands.
All told, immigrants around the world send about $860 billion back to their homelands every year through remittances. This money flows directly to family and friends, helping them pay for housing, food, and other expenses.
This estimate leaves out collective philanthropy, including the money that hometown associations send back to their homelands. I’ve never found a reliable estimate of the scale of hometown associations’ charitable contributions. Even the number of associations across immigrant groups is not fully determined, making estimates of their collective donations hard to calculate.
But what I have observed is how the members of hometown associations team up to serve their communities in ways that don’t involve only money. They voluntarily devote their time, labor, and knowledge to help their countries of origin for the public good.
Editor’s note: This article is part of a partnership the Chronicle has forged with the Conversation and the Associated Press to expand coverage of philanthropy and nonprofits. The three organizations receive support for this work from the Lilly Endowment. This article is republished from the Conversation under a Creative Commons license.