For many years, undocumented families have worried about getting deported, their kids not being able to have a higher education or not being able to have jobs. It soon all changed when President Barack Obama, our 44th president, created a program named “Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA).” In 2012, there was a surge of Mexico's citizens transitioning into a country where they weren’t fully accepted, all to better their children’s lives along with their own. Being a immigrant in America is hard due to having to start over from nothing. Immigrants find themselves working hard manual jobs despite not having any interest in the field they are working in. Some immigrants also see themselves as a burden to the country due to having plans …show more content…
Many immigrant students were very happy with this new program because it'd be able to help them get a higher education and get jobs. The new program made the immigrants feel as if they were here in America legally. With the new DACA program, many immigrant students thought it was too good to be true, while Americans were furious about the new program. It all had a catch to the program to where not every immigrant can be a DACAmented student. Many were not notified by their schools because of the teachers and principals due to being an immigrant. They didn't have the same opportunities as American citizens. While the article “It’s like we are legally ilegal” gives many facts, it gives many feelings of actual DACA participants. In the article the author says “My teachers told me if I worked hard and got good grades, I could work in whatever I wanted to work. Well, guess what? Even after the hard work, the countless nights staying up and writing, reading, studying and multiplying, I find the doors oh higher education closed to me because I don't have a residency status and ineligible for federal aid” (Sayhay, kashiwa Moham, et. al.). She explained this without knowing DACA was now active. In the same peer reviewed article, the author says “I mean so many people were like, I'm going to get DACA and I'll be able to get into school.” DACA didn't count in some schools and didn't count for in state tuition. Although DACA didn't work for some, plenty of others took advantage and fulfilled their dreams. The ones who qualified to receive DACA used it in many ways since it gave them a 2 year visa and opportunities they've never had before. In “Sanctuary conundrum”, Moretti discusses how undocumented students were more than happy to be able to work here in the United States legally. “Young people who came to the United States as children of illegal immigrants to remain in
Our nation is strongest when we embrace the diversity of ideas and contributions from our young people. Today’s decision to end the deferred action for childhood arrivals (DACA) policy effectively disrupts the futures of the nearly 800,000 young people who have called the United States home since childhood — and represents an incredible loss for America, undermining the very foundation on which this country of immigrants was built.
“This policy was implemented unilaterally to great controversy and legal concern after Congress rejected legislation proposals to extend similar benefits on numerous occasions to this same group of illegal aliens…. The executive branch, through DACA, deliberately sought to achieve what the legislative branch specifically refused to authorise on multiple occasions. Such an open ended circumvention of immigration laws was an unconstitutional exercise of authority by the Executive Branch.”
DACA or Deferred Action for Childhood arrivals is a immigration policy put in place in 2012 by the Obama administration. It allows child immigrants, also known as dreamers to stay in our country for work and school purposes without getting deported.
Approving DACA would allow about 700,000 children and young adults to earn permanent residency (Fitz). DACA is known as a program that would provide certain key benefits of legal immigration status and a path for young immigrants to eventually attain citizenship ("DREAM Act”). According to Mahwish Khan, those who support DACA believe that the Dream Act would dramatically increase the pool of highly qualified recruits for the U.S. Armed Forces and think that deporting Dreamers is inhumane and cruel. Furthermore, advocates of DACA strongly feel that the Dream Act would be good for the U.S. economy. On the other hand, according to the article “Are DACA and the DREAM Act 2”, those who oppose DACA are convinced that amnesty should not be given
There are numerous Social welfare issue with when discussing Deferred Action for Childhood arrivals (ACA). As previously mention this program help many immigrant’s children who did not ask to come into this country. If this program is phase out. There would be many immigrants that would be affected in a highly negative way. Many immigrants would have to return to a country that they do not recognize, because they left at a very young age, this could mean they would mostly likely experienced a culture shock. On the other hand, this is going to have an effect in the United States economic due many of the individuals that benefit from DACA are working and paying taxes. This means that a major number of individuals would stop contributing to the
Through the years the DACA legislation has come a long way of providing a great advantage for undocumented students. Through the legislation we have been able to have a stable job and a sense of security. DACA does not only offer an opportunity to financially help the families of those students, who most likely are undocumented as well, but it also offers a deferred action from deportation which allows students to, for at least two years, live without the fear of being taken away from the US. This legislation has helped many students across the United States and many different ways the economy DACA provides a 42 percent wage raise for the recipients which can be connected to higher tax revenue and financial growth (Wong, Rosas, Reyna, Rodriguez,,
In the united states there are 750,000 immigrants that are covered by DACA (Krogstad). The most important part is understanding what daca is and what it stands for. Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals is DACA. This program helps immigrants with student loans and a driver's licence among other benefits. What is equally as important is how DACA came to be as a program and who made it happen. What are its requirements and restrictions, the controversy of a new president and how he will change things as well as the benefits of the program. And knowing the success that most people have experienced while they are protected under it. Since the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals has has a beneficial impact on not only economic but financial
Created by President Obama and passed by Congress on June 15, 2012, Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals also known as DACA is a policy that protects undocumented individuals brought to the U.S by their parents as a minor. This policy gave undocumented immigrants a period of two years in which they are protected against deportation, able to get a job and obtain a driver's license.
As of October 2017, DACA has been abolished by Congress and supports from the Trump Administration. DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals), established by the Department of Homeland Security on June 12, 2012, is a policy which helps illegal aliens that are coming into the United States get benefits that Congress did not act to provide by law. Many of these recipients are spread throughout the United States. In 2014, another policy called DAPA (Deferred Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents) was expanded from the 2012 DACA policy. This policy was similar to DACA but it helped certain aliens who have children’s that have U.S. Citizenship. On June 29, 2017, Texas and several other states sent letters to the
Recently president Trump has cut the DACA (Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) program. DACA is a program for immigrants who would have qualified for protection under the Development, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors Act (DREAM), a bipartisan bill introduced in the Senate in 2001 with the intent of forming a path to citizenship for undocumented immigrants who had come into the US before turning the age of 16.
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) is an executive order signed by President Obama in June 2012. DACA is a federal immigration policy that concerns illegal, undocumented immigrants that have that arrived in the United States prior to their 16th birthday, have been in the country since June 2007, and are under the age of 31 years old. Under DACA, eligible individuals are permitted to receive a renewable work permit, lasting two years, and to be exempt from deportation—under the condition that these individuals are lawful and either attending an educational institution, a high school graduate or currently serving or honorably discharged from the military. The policy does not officially allow for these immigrants to become American citizens. However, this policy protects immigrants that did not come to the United States under their own free will as children.
There are 800,000 undocumented immigrants protected by the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) passed by President Obama. Those persons known as Dreamers were brought illegally to the United States at a young age by their parents. Now they have pursued careers, started families, they have contributed to the United States of America, our country, their country. But on Tuesday, September 5th, 2017, the former president Donald Trump ended this program, leaving thousands of families with the uncertainty that if they will be back together again or not. Dreamers have brought pride to this country, they have been admitted into the best universities, they have received the best scholarships such as Bill Gates scholarship. DACA’s deadline is October 5th; this is the last opportunity for the Dreamers to continue with their right to pursue their education. Dreamers have to stay in the United States and be legal citizens because they have spent their whole life here, they help the U.S. economy, they bring cultural diversity to the country, the Dreamers as their name states want to achieve the American dream by pursuing a better education.
On September 5, 2017, Donald Trump announced the end of a program known as DACA (Brennan Hoban). The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals has offered protections to over 750,000 young adults in the United States (“Why DACA Should Stay In Place”). The program protected children, known as Dreamers, under the age of fifteen that were illegally brought to this country by their parents. They were promised protection from deportation and were given visas to legally work and attend school in the U.S. This promise was recently revoked, and Dreamers are now facing a six month window before they will be deported. This act on behalf of the Trump administration demonstrates a complete lack of empathy and compassion. It will break families apart and remove established members in communities. Furthermore, in taking this step, Trump’s administration is disregarding the real contributions immigrants have made in this society. In addition to the moral implications of extraditing people who have lived their entire lives in this country, repealing DACA is an injustice and will be detrimental to our society. DACA recipients deserve legal immunity because they are acculturated to the U.S., they are productive members of society, and they have an immediate impact on the economy.
Throughout the world, over 244 million migrants are moving from their home countries whether it is for economic, social or political reasons. In September of 2017, the United States government announced the ending of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program (DACA). The program’s primary focus was to protect children brought into the United States illegally, a temporary right to live, work and study in the country. This move made by the Trump administration has caused a lot controversy and debates on illegal immigration between both liberals and conservatives all over the United States and the world. Illegal immigration is a horrible thing for the United States, and the abolishment of the DACA program is needed. Illegal immigration harms the American workforce and the American economy; it costs taxpayers vast amounts of dollars and undermines legal immigration.
Erika Summers-Effler, when discussing my post-graduate aspirations, said to me “We don’t do this for fun or prestige, a sociology PhD does not turn my family’s heads at thanksgiving dinner. We do it because we’re drawn to it, there’s something that connects each of us to the field.” My senior thesis reflects this, a product of the life of an immigrant catalyzed by formal training as an undergraduate. Given the rate at which the political landscape is shifting, and the center stage that immigration has taken in discourse, a project on immigration, specifically DACA (the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals) is the object of my motivation. My research is being conducted at a crucial period for immigration law, during the six-month period that