An impassioned argument by a young Mexican American woman for the abolition of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Abuses in detention centers. Detention of handicapped children. The silencing of activists. Each week, another attack on immigrant rights comes to light. It¿s going to be hard to say we didn¿t know. ICE has escalated a campaign that tears apart families and ruins lives. But this didn¿t begin, and won¿t end, with Donald Trump in the White House. The Obama administration deported record numbers of immigrants, wildly expanded the scope and capacities of ICE, and supported…mehr
An impassioned argument by a young Mexican American woman for the abolition of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Abuses in detention centers. Detention of handicapped children. The silencing of activists. Each week, another attack on immigrant rights comes to light. It¿s going to be hard to say we didn¿t know. ICE has escalated a campaign that tears apart families and ruins lives. But this didn¿t begin, and won¿t end, with Donald Trump in the White House. The Obama administration deported record numbers of immigrants, wildly expanded the scope and capacities of ICE, and supported detention center quotas. Voting Democrat alone won¿t save these children. Immigration does not take place in a vacuum; each time the United States pushes through another exploitative trade deal or wreaks havoc on sovereign countries, we perpetuate migration flows fueled not by opportunity but by desperation. How long will we continue funding an agency premised upon the abuse and dehumanization of undocumented immigrants? We need to abolish ICE. This concise, accessible book sets out the reasons why and the way it can be brought about.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
NATASCHA ELENA UHLMANN is a writer and immigrant rights activist from Sonora, Mexico. Uhlmann¿s writing has appeared in Teen Vogue, Truthout, and Bitch Media. She is also the editor of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador¿s book, A New Hope for Mexico: Saying No to Corruption, Violence, and Trump¿s Wall. She lives in New York City.
Inhaltsangabe
Table of Contents 1. HOW DID WE GET HERE? This chapter traces a history of US intervention in Latin America, mapping the way the US has created the very migrant crisis it now decries. Migration is explored in the context of the US overthrow of Guatemalan president Jacobo Árbenz, its funding of right wing death squads, and the deportation --into the very power vacuum the US created-- of gang members. This is how MS-13 and Barrio 18, the two gangs that now hold much of Latin America hostage, came to be. 2. BILL CLINTON BUILT THE WALL This chapter details the Democrats complicity in US immigration policy. From Obama, who immigration activists have branded Deporter in Chief , to Clinton s disastrous implementation of NAFTA that sent thousands of people on the migrant trail, the cruelty of US immigration policy is a wholly bipartisan affair. 3. IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT, THEN AND NOW This chapter traces a history of US immigration enforcement beginning with the country s first naturalization law of 1790, which limited citizenship to free white persons of good moral character. Though the language of enforcement may have changed, this racialized standard has underpinned US immigration policy throughout its history--it was not until the Hart Celler Act of 1965 that its Eurocentric quota system was abolished. Even then, the impetus to preserve a white, able bodied state remains see, HIV/AIDS travel and immigration bans as late as 2009 and racial profiling under the auspices of the War on Terror. And yet, while US immigration enforcement has always been racist, it is now bolstered by new advancements in technology --and the Trump administration s wholesale endorsement of ICE terror. 4. ABOLITION This chapter puts forth the case for abolishing ICE and argues that not only is it morally necessary in the face of US intervention, it is also an achievable policy demand. It maps strategies to constrain and ultimately dismantle the agency, such as targeting contractors who do business with ICE, addressing local detention quotas, organizing against broken windows policing and ultimately, defunding the agency.
Table of Contents 1. HOW DID WE GET HERE? This chapter traces a history of US intervention in Latin America, mapping the way the US has created the very migrant crisis it now decries. Migration is explored in the context of the US overthrow of Guatemalan president Jacobo Árbenz, its funding of right wing death squads, and the deportation --into the very power vacuum the US created-- of gang members. This is how MS-13 and Barrio 18, the two gangs that now hold much of Latin America hostage, came to be. 2. BILL CLINTON BUILT THE WALL This chapter details the Democrats complicity in US immigration policy. From Obama, who immigration activists have branded Deporter in Chief , to Clinton s disastrous implementation of NAFTA that sent thousands of people on the migrant trail, the cruelty of US immigration policy is a wholly bipartisan affair. 3. IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT, THEN AND NOW This chapter traces a history of US immigration enforcement beginning with the country s first naturalization law of 1790, which limited citizenship to free white persons of good moral character. Though the language of enforcement may have changed, this racialized standard has underpinned US immigration policy throughout its history--it was not until the Hart Celler Act of 1965 that its Eurocentric quota system was abolished. Even then, the impetus to preserve a white, able bodied state remains see, HIV/AIDS travel and immigration bans as late as 2009 and racial profiling under the auspices of the War on Terror. And yet, while US immigration enforcement has always been racist, it is now bolstered by new advancements in technology --and the Trump administration s wholesale endorsement of ICE terror. 4. ABOLITION This chapter puts forth the case for abolishing ICE and argues that not only is it morally necessary in the face of US intervention, it is also an achievable policy demand. It maps strategies to constrain and ultimately dismantle the agency, such as targeting contractors who do business with ICE, addressing local detention quotas, organizing against broken windows policing and ultimately, defunding the agency.
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