Migration between Mexico and the United States has always been an important part of life in the Americas, but recent years show noticeable changes in who is moving, why they move, and how they are received. To understand these shifts, this project uses two main datasets. The first is the Global Refugee and Asylum-Seeker Data (2019–2024), which provides annual counts of asylum seekers, refugees, and other displaced populations across different regions. We filtered this dataset to focus specifically on Mexico, the United States, Central America, and North America so we could track broader regional trends. The second dataset comes from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Homeland Security Statistics, specifically the Profiles on Lawful Permanent Residents, which include detailed information about Mexican immigrants who receive green cards, such as their age, occupation, and marital status. Together, these datasets offer both a wide regional view of displacement and a closer look at long-term immigrant settlement patterns in the United States. We use these data sources, along with research on immigration policy, migrant health, and the social experiences of Latino and Mexican communities, to explore three main questions: How does migration relate to migrant health? How do migration trends align with U.S. immigration policies? And how do these patterns shape the social and economic experiences of migrants in the U.S.? Combining these datasets with existing scholarship helps show how policy, health, and social attitudes intersect with current migration patterns.