DACA

DACA

A Snapshot of Undocumented College Students in the United States

A Snapshot of Undocumented College Students in the United States

The school year has started, and many college students are returning to campuses nationwide, including undocumented and DACA-eligible students. Data from the 2021 American Community Survey (ACS) and analyzed by the American Immigration Council reveals that 408,000 of these students are undocumented, representing 1.9% of all college students… Read More

Time Is Running Out for Congress to Act on Immigration This Year

Time Is Running Out for Congress to Act on Immigration This Year

Can immigration avoid a cold winter in Congress? That’s the question immigrants and their advocates are asking as time runs out on the current Congress. The fate of Afghan evacuees, Dreamers, farmworkers and others who are stuck in our outdated immigration system hinges in the short term on whether crucial… Read More

Here Are the Immigration Cases Before the Supreme Court This Term

Here Are the Immigration Cases Before the Supreme Court This Term

The United States Supreme Court will face challenging questions impacting immigration law as it begins considering cases in its October 2021 term. The Court’s decisions on these cases will impact access to: Federal court review over certain immigration judge decisions. Bond hearings for certain noncitizens who have spent months in… Read More

Federal Judge Strikes Down DACA: What You Need to Know

Federal Judge Strikes Down DACA: What You Need to Know

Nearly a decade after the U.S. Department of Homeland Security created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program to provide protections to undocumented immigrants brought here as children, Judge Andrew Hanen of the Southern District of Texas struck down the program on July 16, ordering U.S. Citizenship and Immigration… Read More

No Need to Wait for Congress to Begin Using Humanizing Language in the Immigration Space

No Need to Wait for Congress to Begin Using Humanizing Language in the Immigration Space

The Biden administration’s immigration reform bill will have a provision that seeks to replace the term “alien” with “noncitizen” in immigration law. The term “alien” in the Immigration and Nationality Act refers to any person who is not a citizen or national of the United States. It dates back… Read More

Talking Turkey: How to Discuss Immigration for Long-Lasting Change

Talking Turkey: How to Discuss Immigration for Long-Lasting Change

While our Thanksgiving dinner tables may look a little different this year, one thing remains the same: Thanksgiving is a time to catch up and reconnect with loved ones. Whether you are doing this by phone, Zoom, or at a social distanced gathering, many of our conversations will reveal that… Read More

What You Need to Know About the Partial DACA Rescission Memo

What You Need to Know About the Partial DACA Rescission Memo

After nearly six weeks of inaction following its stinging defeat before the Supreme Court on June 18, the Department of Homeland Security released a memo gutting the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) initiative. This will set the stage for a full rescission of the initiative in… Read More

USCIS Wastes Time and Money With Increased Vetting in Citizenship Processing

USCIS Wastes Time and Money With Increased Vetting in Citizenship Processing

The Trump administration has justified major changes to citizenship processing to “safeguard” the U.S. immigration system from application fraud. Yet the increased vetting has not lowered the number of approvals over the last few years, indicating an absence of fraud. The time it takes to approve those applications, however,… Read More

The Supreme Court Gave DACA a Lifeline. Now Trump and Congress Need to Create a Path to Citizenship for Dreamers.  

The Supreme Court Gave DACA a Lifeline. Now Trump and Congress Need to Create a Path to Citizenship for Dreamers.  

The Supreme Court issued its long-anticipated decision in DHS v. Regents of the University of California—the case challenging the administration’s attempt to dismantle the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) initiative. The Court ruled on June 18 that the administration did not adequately explain its decision to end… Read More

DACA Made It Possible For Me to Fight Against COVID-19. The Supreme Court May Soon Make That Impossible.

DACA Made It Possible For Me to Fight Against COVID-19. The Supreme Court May Soon Make That Impossible.

My name is Sonia Martinez. I am a Certified Nursing Assistant working to help treat patients with COVID-19 at University of Colorado Hospital in Aurora, Colorado. I am also one of the 650,000 Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals recipients in the United States today. According to… Read More

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