Jeanne Batalova, Julia Gelatt and Michael Fix, MPI, April 2024 "The U.S. economy has changed dramatically in recent decades, from one that was heavily industrial to one that is mostly service and...
Chronicle of Higher Education "One woman’s journey between two countries in pursuit of an education and a brighter future Every weekday for the past 10 years, Viviana Mitre has driven back...
News reports indicate that some of the migrants trafficked to Martha's Vineyard by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis will receive work permits, protection against removal and eligibility for U visas. See...
Chris Brouwer, Cornell Law, Apr. 22, 2024 "Professors Jaclyn Kelley-Widmer and Stephen Yale-Loehr have secured a $1.5 million grant from Crankstart for their groundbreaking initiative, the Path2Papers...
Cyrus D. Mehta and Kaitlyn Box, Apr. 23, 2024 "On April 10, 2024, USCIS issued a policy alert clarifying the term “sciences or arts” for Schedule A, Group II occupations. Schedule A...
Melissa del Bosque, Border Chronicle, May 3, 2022
"In Arizona and Texas, border residents are noticing more and more personal belongings discarded along the U.S. side of the border wall. They include passports, birth certificates, police reports, and other confidential documents that could be crucial in proving asylum cases. ... [I]n South Texas, in the Rio Grande Valley, abandoned belongings continue to pile up along the U.S. side of the border wall. In some places they are so thick that the Border Patrol uses a grader to “shove it off into piles at the side of the road,” says Scott Nicol, an environmentalist and artist, who often walks the stretch of border wall near his home and inspects the belongings left behind. Nicol says he’s found birth certificates, passports, police reports, and other confidential documents. “What really got to me were the x-rays I found. They were for a six-year-old boy, and it showed a steel rod in his spine. It was obviously for an asylum claim,” he says. “Why would anyone part with those?” ... [A]fter the Trump administration started the Migrant Protection Protocols program, often referred to as “Remain in Mexico,” some of the migrants they encountered told them Border Patrol agents had ripped up their Mexican immigration visas and other documents. “The agents would say that they were fake documents when they were actually real, and they really needed them,” she says. ... Blake Gentry, director of the indigenous language office at Casa Alitas, a migrant shelter in Tucson, estimates that about one-third of the people who arrive at the shelter have no documents or belongings. In 30 years of working on the border, he says he’s never heard of passports and other confidential documents being dumped, especially next to a Border Patrol checkpoint. Gentry suspects it’s Border Patrol agents who are doing the dumping. “If this is happening on the U.S. side of the wall, it’s most likely Border Patrol,” he says. Even if agents suspected the documents were fake, they should have at least confiscated them, he says: “If they’re throwing away documents in public dumpsters without shredding them, then that tells me they’re not doing investigations.” Gentry says there’s often a disconnect between the law and how agents operate along the border. “There’s what the Border Patrol says, and then there’s the law,” he says. “In terms of the daily functions of the Border Patrol, you can always find a lot of anomalies in what goes on.”"