(Im)migration Movements & the Law

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U.S. Immigration | Let's Talk | NPR
U.S. Immigration | Let's Talk | NPR
For over 200 years the U.S. Immigration policies have determined who the U.S. lets in, and who is shut out. NPR’s Tom Gjelten explains. • Read or listen to "What Does Chain Migration Mean? We Get An Explanation" at https://n.pr/2rnvDun ------------------------------------------------------ Subscribe to NPR on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/npr Follow NPR elsewhere, too: • Twitter: https://twitter.com/npr • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NPR • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/npr/ • Tumblr: http://npr.tumblr.com/ • Snapchat: https://www.snapchat.com/add/npr ABOUT NPR NPR connects to audiences on the air, on demand, online, and in person. More than 26 million radio listeners tune in to NPR stations each week and more than 36 million unique visitors access NPR.org each month making NPR one of the most trusted sources of news and insights on life and the arts. NPR is also the leading publisher of podcasts, with 36 original shows and an average of 4 million listeners per week. NPR shares compelling stories, audio and photos with millions of social media users on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, YouTube and Snapchat; NPR News and NPR One apps, online streaming, podcasts, iTunes radio and connected car dashboards help meet audiences where they are. NPR's live events bring to the stage two-way conversations between NPR hosts and the audience in collaboration with the public radio Member Station community. This robust access to public service journalism makes NPR an indispensable resource in the media landscape.
·youtu.be·
U.S. Immigration | Let's Talk | NPR
United States Immigration and Border Policy in 2019
United States Immigration and Border Policy in 2019
Michelle Brané and Randy Capps explore the data and stories behind the headlines to better understand what is taking place in Latin American countries, at the US-Mexico border, and with individuals once they arrive in the United States. Speakers: Michelle Brané, Senior Director, Migrant Rights and Justice program, Women's Refugee Commission Randy Capps, Director of Research for US Program, Migration Policy Institute
·youtu.be·
United States Immigration and Border Policy in 2019
The Immigration Law Nobody's Heard of That Changed America
The Immigration Law Nobody's Heard of That Changed America
Is COVID-19 bringing the mythology of America as a nation of immigrants to an end? Q&A with The New York Times' Jia Lynn Yang on her new book, One Mighty and Irresistible Tide: The Epic Struggle Over American Immigration, 1924-1965. Full text and links: reason.com/video/the-immigration-law-nobodys-heard-of-that-changed-america ------------- Subscribe to our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/ReasonTV?sub_... Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Reason.Magazine Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/reason ------------- What will the COVID-19 pandemic and the lockdown of our society mean for the hundreds of thousands of foreign workers, refugees, and asylum seekers who apply annually to become Americans? Donald Trump won the presidential election in 2016 in part by vowing to "build a wall," deport all unauthorized residents, and massively reduce the number of people welcomed here legally. COVID-19, which has its origins in Wuhan, China, may help the president to deliver fully on his campaign promises. Is the mythology of America as a nation of immigrants coming to an end? A deputy national editor at The New York Times, Jia Lynn Yang is the author of the timely new book, One Mighty and Irresistible Tide: The Epic Struggle Over American Immigration, 1924-1965. The book begins at another dark moment in American immigration policy when a restrictive law ended a long period of relatively open borders and effectively stopped mass movement to the United States for the next 40 years. It tells the story of the decadeslong battle that led the U.S. to begin accepting foreigners once again. And yet almost nobody involved in that fight foresaw the extent to which the 1965 law signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson would open the door once again to large numbers of new immigrants—including Yang's family, who came here from Taiwan in the 1970s. Nick Gillespie sat down with Yang in early March and again in May to discuss what her book and personal story can teach us about immigration policy in the midst of a pandemic. Edited by John Osterhoudt, intro and bridge by Lex Villena Photos: Immigrants arriving, Everett Collection/Newscom; Wall Photo, ID 152963524 © Alexanderphoto7/Dreamstime.com; Trump speaking, Stefani Reynolds/CNP/AdMedia/Newscom; Johnson signing, LBJ Library photo by Yoichi Okam/Yoichi Okam - LBJ Library via CNP/Newscom
·youtu.be·
The Immigration Law Nobody's Heard of That Changed America
List of United States immigration laws - Wikipedia
List of United States immigration laws - Wikipedia
Many acts of congress and executive actions relating to immigration to the United States and citizenship of the United States have been enacted in the United States. Most immigration and nationality laws are codified in Title 8 of the United States Code.
·en.wikipedia.org·
List of United States immigration laws - Wikipedia
Abolish ICE . . . and Then What?
Abolish ICE . . . and Then What?
This Essay proposes a blueprint for a new humane and effective immigration-enforcement system that could follow the dissolution of ICE. It explores the irredeemable defects of ICE and its enforcement paradigm and suggests realistic mechanisms to increase compliance with immigration laws without detention or mass deportation. 
·yalelawjournal.org·
Abolish ICE . . . and Then What?
AILA - Current Immigration Laws
AILA - Current Immigration Laws
Current U.S. immigration law is based on the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 ("INA," codified at 8 U.S.C. §1101 et.seq.), which has been amended many times over the last 40 years. Included are some of the most important and recent amendments to the INA.
·aila.org·
AILA - Current Immigration Laws
Rethinking the U.S. Legal Immigration System: A Policy Road Map
Rethinking the U.S. Legal Immigration System: A Policy Road Map
The U.S. legal immigration system, last significantly updated by Congress in 1990, is profoundly misaligned with demographic and other realities—resulting in enormous consequences for the country and for its economy. This road map sketches the broad contours of some of the most needed reforms in the legal immigration system, made all the more urgent by U.S. population aging and changing labor market demands.
·migrationpolicy.org·
Rethinking the U.S. Legal Immigration System: A Policy Road Map
A Short History of Immigrant Rights in the United States
A Short History of Immigrant Rights in the United States
Become a Patron! Geoffrey Heeren excerpted from: Geoffrey Heeren, Persons Who Are Not the People: the Changing Rights of Immigrants in the United States, 44 Columbia Human Rights Law Review367 (Winter, 2013) (328 Footnotes Omitted) This nation was seemingly founded on the idea that all persons enjoy core rights of...
·racism.org·
A Short History of Immigrant Rights in the United States
Legal Directory - Nonprofit Resource Center
Legal Directory - Nonprofit Resource Center
Immigration Advocates Network is a free national online network that supports legal advocates working on behalf of immigrants' rights.
·immigrationadvocates.org·
Legal Directory - Nonprofit Resource Center
Judge blocks rule to bar asylum for immigrants convicted of crimes | Reuters
Judge blocks rule to bar asylum for immigrants convicted of crimes | Reuters
A federal judge in California on Thursday issued a nationwide injunction blocking the Trump administration from implementing a rule that would bar individuals convicted of any felony and a host of other crimes from obtaining asylum, one day before it was set to take effect.
·reuters.com·
Judge blocks rule to bar asylum for immigrants convicted of crimes | Reuters
What constitutional rights do undocumented immigrants have?
What constitutional rights do undocumented immigrants have?
The administration’s “zero-tolerance” immigration policy and the recent surge in family separations at the border -- a practice President Donald Trump ended through executive order -- has called attention to the legal rights of immigrants under U.S. law.
·pbs.org·
What constitutional rights do undocumented immigrants have?
Immigration
Immigration
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibits discrimination in hiring, promotion, discharge, pay, fringe benefits, job training, classification, referral, and other aspects of employment, on the basis of race, color or national origin. Title VII is enforced by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).
·dol.gov·
Immigration
Laws and Policy - U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Laws and Policy - U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
This section provides information on laws, regulations, policies, other authorities, and instructive materials and notices, including links to executive orders, Administrative Appeals Office (AAO)
·uscis.gov·
Laws and Policy - U. S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
Move to the United States | Homeland Security
Move to the United States | Homeland Security
Foreign citizens wishing to immigrate and live permanently in the U.S. must comply with U.S. visa immigration laws, and specific procedures to apply for visas.
·dhs.gov·
Move to the United States | Homeland Security