History of Immigration

History of Immigration

Immigration policies, laws, and attitudes toward immigrants have evolved in the U.S. Our system has continued to adapt over time, responding to changing global dynamics, economic needs, and political pressure. By learning from our immigrant past, we can apply the lessons learned to help shape how we treat immigration and immigrants in the future.

Felony Reentry Immigration Law Is Unconstitutional Due to Racist Origins, Judge Rules

Felony Reentry Immigration Law Is Unconstitutional Due to Racist Origins, Judge Rules

A federal judge ruled for the first time in U.S. history that a provision of U.S. immigration law which makes it a felony for someone to reenter the United States after having been deported is unconstitutional because of its racist origins. Since 1929, U.S. immigration law has made it… Read More

Council and Broad Coalition Urge Department of Homeland Security to Withdraw Records Destruction Plans

Council and Broad Coalition Urge Department of Homeland Security to Withdraw Records Destruction Plans

In this letter, the Council and a diverse coalition call on the Biden administration to stop and reevaluate plans to destroy immigration agency records documenting abuse and misconduct. Read More

Immigration Policies Based on Deterrence Don’t Work

Immigration Policies Based on Deterrence Don’t Work

Over the last two months, the Biden administration has been pressured to carry out another crackdown at the border as the number of arriving families and children rise. But officials making these calls must grapple with one simple fact: immigration enforcement through deterrence doesn’t work. If we want to keep… Read More

The Border Patrol’s Culture of Racism Impacts Every Facet of the Agency Today

The Border Patrol’s Culture of Racism Impacts Every Facet of the Agency Today

The U.S. Border Patrol has been rooted in institutional racism since its founding in 1924. Almost a century later, the agency continues to commit racially fueled violent acts with near impunity. The American Immigration Council details this history in a new report, The Legacy of Racism within the U.S. Read More

The Media Is Obsessed With the 'Latino Vote' – There Is No Such Thing

The Media Is Obsessed With the ‘Latino Vote’ – There Is No Such Thing

A major theme of the 2020 election has been how demographic shifts in the American electorate would influence the outcome. Political pundits have given a great deal of airtime to examining the voting patterns of “Latinos” in the United States. Exit polls show that President Trump fared well with… Read More

Comments on U.S. Customs and Border Protection Records Destruction Schedule

Comments on U.S. Customs and Border Protection Records Destruction Schedule

U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) is attempting to permanently destroy records related to civil rights complaints against the agency, administrative and criminal investigations into CBP officials’ conduct, and records related to Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) allegations. On July 9, 2020, the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) recommended… Read More

The American Immigration Council Mourns the Loss of a Fierce Advocate and Justice Seeker

The American Immigration Council Mourns the Loss of a Fierce Advocate and Justice Seeker

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the second woman to serve on the Supreme Court of the United States and champion of fairness and equality, died Friday in Washington, DC. The following statement is from Beth Werlin, executive director of the American Immigration Council: Read More

The Lie About Kamala Harris and Birthright Citizenship

The Lie About Kamala Harris and Birthright Citizenship

People born in the United States are American citizens, regardless of what President Trump claims. Birthright citizenship—enshrined by the Fourteenth Amendment in the U.S. Constitution—guarantees it. Trump recently suggested to the contrary after a Newsweek column erroneously argued that vice presidential candidate… Read More

Why a Shorter Census Timeline Hurts Immigrant Communities

Why a Shorter Census Timeline Hurts Immigrant Communities

The Trump administration announced on August 3 plans to end the 2020 Census one month earlier than previously planned. The change has led to fears that immigrant and BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and people of color) communities will be undercounted. This has the real potential to harm them financially and politically… Read More

Canadian Court Rules US Is No Longer a 'Safe Third Country' for Asylum Applicants

Canadian Court Rules US Is No Longer a ‘Safe Third Country’ for Asylum Applicants

A Canadian court has ruled that the United States is no longer a country to which the Canadian government could safely return asylum seekers who crossed the U.S-Canada land border.  This upends more than 15 years of bilateral cooperation between the two countries. On July 22, the Federal Court of… Read More

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