911爆料网 Launches 鈥楤orders and Immigration鈥 Series

News subtitle

A panel on mass deportations kicked off the Dialogue Project series on Monday.

Image
Image
Panelists Ieva Jusionyte, Adam Goodman, and Cecilia Menj铆var discuss amongst eachother
Brown University anthropologist Ieva Jusionyte, left, speaks at the Jan. 13 panel discussion on mass deportations alongside fellow panelists Adam Goodman of the University of Illinois Chicago and Cecilia Menj铆var of UCLA. (Photo by Robert Gill)
Body

911爆料网 launched a new 鈥攈osted by the Dialogue Project鈥攚ith a Jan. 13 event focused on the high-profile issue of mass deportations.

With the inauguration of Donald Trump to a second presidential term on Jan. 20, and given his campaign promise to combat illegal immigration, the threat of large-scale expulsion is very real, said an interdisciplinary panel of faculty experts.

鈥淲e as panelists take very seriously the . We are led to believe that mass deportation is upon us within a week,鈥 said moderator , the Ralph and Richard Lazarus Professor of History, Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies, and Human Relations at 911爆料网. 

The panel, which included University of Illinois Chicago historian Adam Goodman, Brown University anthropologist , and UCLA sociologist , discussed what mass deportation means, how it might be carried out, and its potential consequences for U.S. domestic and foreign policy. 

Image
911爆料网 community members listening to speakers
Members of the 911爆料网 community listen to the panel discussion on mass deportations. The Jan. 13 event was the first in a Dialogue Project special topic series on borders and immigration. (Photo by Robert Gill)

The historical context for mass deportation goes back decades, Goodman said. His research has found that more than 60 million people have been deported from the U.S. in the last 140 years. President-elect Trump has stated that he would like to deport the approximately 11 million undocumented immigrants living in this country, which includes those who have been legally granted temporary protected status, or TPS.

鈥淚t鈥檚 unclear what is meant by mass deportation. Who will be targeted? Is it criminals, is it everyone who is in the country undocumented? That has implications for the labor force for all sectors of the U.S. economy,鈥 said Menj铆var.

Both documented and undocumented immigrants have provided essential labor during the COVID-19 pandemic and after natural disasters, she said. 

鈥淎cross some sectors, immigrant labor is the backbone,鈥 Menj铆var added. 

The largest group of immigrants who want to enter the U.S. are from Mexico, said Jusionyte, citing lack of economic opportunities and insecurity as the dominant factors in their decision to leave their home country. The flow of American guns into Mexico contributes to crime and violence and a subsequent distrust of Mexican law enforcement.

鈥淲hen you have children, you pack up and leave,鈥 Jusionyte said.

And the reality is that 90% of such drugs as fentanyl, heroin, methamphetamines, and cocaine come into the country through ports of entry, not across deserts or the Rio Grande, Jusionyte added. 

In its most recent annual , the FBI reported that there had been a 3% decrease in violent crime and a 2.4% decrease in property crime. Nonetheless, when politicians pin the perception of increased crime rates on undocumented immigrants, it is a 鈥減otent political message,鈥 said Jusionyte. 

鈥淚f you listen to what politicians and some media say you鈥檇 think the vast majority of people who want to come to the U.S. are terrorists and criminals,鈥 Goodman said. 

In reality, they are interested in finding work and new opportunities, and reuniting with their families and relatives who are already in the country, he added.

Scapegoating immigrants has a long and troubling history, Goodman observed. Although it is not now a widely known episode, the Eisenhower administration unrolled in 1954 a massive deportation that expelled some 300,000 Mexican immigrants, according to the Los Angeles Times. In the late 1960s and early 1970s, efforts to deport undocumented immigrants reintensified, Goodman added. 

Image
Matthew Garcia moderating the panel behind a podium
Professor Matthew Garcia of the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies moderated the discussion. (Photo by Robert Gill)

Calling that period the 鈥渄awn of the age of mass expulsion,鈥 Goodman said that the 鈥渞amping up of enforcement led to the possibility of apprehension becoming a fact of everyday life for people.鈥

In fiscal year 2023-2024, the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement deported 271,484 immigrants, marking the highest level of deportations since 2014, .

With Republicans holding power in Washington, immigrant rights and legal aid organizations, colleges and universities, and religious institutions are preparing for the mass expulsion of undocumented immigrants and asylum seekers that Trump has promised. 

Menj铆var said that it is also critical to combat the often 鈥渧ile language鈥 and misleading rhetoric used to describe immigrants, . 

鈥淭he more these extremely negative narratives are repeated, the more they become normalized and that has an effect on the immigrant population. They become accepted,鈥 Menj铆var said.

What are the chances for meaningful reform of an immigration system that the American public, and their representatives in Congress, regard as broken?

Goodman is not encouraged. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a repeat of draconian immigration policies that have shaped the immigration system鈥 since the 1990s, he said. While the Republican party is in lockstep with Trump鈥檚 stated policy objectives, the Democratic party is 鈥渂lowing in the wind.鈥

In answer to a question about whether Trump could actually effect substantive immigration reform, Jusionyte was dubious. 鈥淚t鈥檚 politically expedient for Republicans to have immigration as a mess,鈥 she said. 

The challenge is how to build a functioning migration system, Menj铆var said. The fact is that 鈥渞egardless of how restrictive the border system is, people continue to migrate鈥攚ith or without authorization.鈥 

Wendy Cruz-Bahena 鈥24, a Latin American and Caribbean studies major, said it was valuable to listen to the panelists outlining the nuances of immigration policy, and what people might do to protest potentially harsh tactics to deport immigrants in the second Trump administration.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important to highlight the different forms of resistance at the federal, state, local, and grassroots levels,鈥 she said.

More than 350 people have watched or in person. The special topic series on borders and immigration is part of the Dialogue Project and is offered in partnership with the Department of Latin American, Latino, and Caribbean Studies and aims to examine the issue through the lens of multiple disciplines.

Other events in the series will include: a Feb. 20-22 conference on and an April 1 panel, Mexico As Border? Power, Violence, and the Future of U.S.-Mexico Relations.

The Dialogue Project will also host a public conversation with senior fellow M贸nica Guzm谩n on Feb. 25. The group is a cross-partisan, volunteer-led movement that aims to bridge partisan divides.

Nicola Smith