Title: Border/Immigration%20Policy,%201924-1996
1Border/Immigration Policy, 1924-1996
2Revolution and its Wake
- Flood of dispossessed and displaced migrants
north - Coincides with rise of agribusiness in US
Southwest - Immigration Act of 1924 establishes national
quotas and the Border Patrol
3Depression, the Bracero Program, Operation
Wetback, and the Immigration Act of 1965
- Hundreds of thousands sent back during Depression
- Bracero Program 1942-1964
- B.P. institutionalized migration, created
permanent migratory networks - Operation Wetback 1954 mass deportation
- 1965 National quotas terminated
4Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA), 1986
- Employer sanctions
- Restrictions in social services
- Amnesty 2 million legalized
- Facilitates illegal immigration
51990s backlash
- Pat Buchanan holds press conference above
Smugglers Canyon illegal invasion - Most acute in California
- Budget crisis and recession
- Rising nativist fears
- Pete Wilson saves a floundering election campaign
- Proposition 187, 1994
- Largely symbolic message to the feds declared
unconstitutional
6Clinton Administration and After
- Beefs up Border Patrol
- INS becomes fastest growing federal agency
- INS developed more gun-carrying personnel than
any other agency - Immigration Reform and Immigration Responsibility
Act of 1996 creates 10,000 new Border Patrol
agents by 2001 - All in a period of government downsizing
7Clinton Continued
- Clintons welfare reform bill cuts many social
programs for immigrants. - Illegal immigrants become ineligible for
virtually all federal and state benefits except
emergency medical care, immunization programs,
and disaster relief.
8Operations
- Operation Blockade, 1993 (Operation
Hold-the-Line) 450 agents over 20 miles - Operation Gatekeeper, 1994 (designed between INS
and Defense Departments Center for Low Intensity
Conflict) - Operation Safeguard, 1995 (apprehensions rise
from 3,000/month in 1995 to 27,000 in March 1999)
9Border Protection, Antiterrorism, and Illegal
Immigration Control Act of 2005 (H.R. 4437)
- Would criminalize undocumented immigrants as
felons - Punish those who try to help them under
anti-smuggling laws - Machine-scannable social security cards
- Workplace enforcement
- Build the wall!
- Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wisconsin)
10Senate Response McCain-Kennedy Proposal
- Calls for a streamlined path to citizenship for
the 10- 12 million illegal aliens in the U.S.
(the specter of amnesty) - A guest-worker program
- Family reunification clause to provide additional
green cards for family members of U.S. citizens
11Operational Control and Immigration Reform in the
Age of Terror the Secure Fence Act of 2006
- OPERATIONAL CONTROL DEFINED.In this section,
the term operational control means the
prevention of all unlawful entries into the
United States, including entries by terrorists,
other unlawful aliens, instruments of terrorism,
narcotics, and other contraband. - Comprehensive Immigration Reform Begins With
Securing The Border - 373 miles of fence by end of 2008
- Surveillance Technology
- Beefing up border patrol
- Path to citizenship
12Guest-workers Z Visas
- Z visa applicants pay a 1,000 fine for heads of
households, additional 500 fine for each
dependent. - Processing fee of up to 1,500 and a 500 state
impact assistance fee. - Applicants must be employed or contracted for
employment, pass background checks, and agree to
meet accelerated English and civics requirements.
- Renewable every four years.
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14Recent Security Specifics
- 700 miles of fencing
- surveillance cameras
- satellite communications among enforcement
agencies - unmanned aerial vehicles and Aerostat Radar
System to improve surveillance
15The Fence
- Cost overruns
- 5 million miles
- Total cost 49 billion
- Bug-ridden technology
16Obama/Napolitano
- Similar to the Bush plan except little on
guest-workers - Crack down on employers
- Employment eligibility verification system
- Leery of workplace raids
17Meanwhile
18Agua Prieta and the Field School
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22Maquiladoras
23When recession hits the U.S.
- Mexico bleeds jobs
- Impact on maquila sector especially hard
- and the U.S. becomes a colder place for Mexican
immigrants.
24The Drug Business
- The State
- Hypertrophies self-enrichment, atrophies
accountability to constituencies - Less faith in government support
- Barrio residents
- The quest for living wages
- A normalized economic sector
25DouglaPrieta Trabajan
- Reduce dependency
- Self-determination
- Food production as hub
- Community identity and organizing
- Self-sufficiency
- Poverty reduction
- Health
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