“…A few respondents were members of families who had arrived in the 1990s as part of the family re-unification programme or the Immigration Act of 1990, which raised the annual number of professional immigrants allowed entry to 140,000. These migrants had to meet new selection criteria, particularly the possession of high skills in demand in the USA such as in medicine, scientific research, engineering and information technologies (Purkayastha, 2005).Though there are no official figures, like other Indian Americans (Kurien, 2006), Jains in my study are among the wealthiest and most educated foreign-born group. In the United States Jains are dispersed throughout ten states dominated by New Jersey, California and New York, with significant representations in Maryland, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, and Texas (Gaustad and Barlow, 2000).…”