Border Books: 7 Important Immigration Stories From Central America
[2024-02-08 12:56:40]
As there were lots of recent news reports from the Mexican and American border, I turned to the book to learn more about the ongoing crisis and affected individuals. Although immigration policies have changed rapidly in the past 30 years, these stories are derived from immigrants from the 1980s to the present and are a powerful representative of the Central American immigration trial and the humanitarian crisis in progress in the border areas .
This is the true story of four Mexican high school students (two have legal documents and two do not have legal documents), starting from the first half of high level dance in Denver, Colorado. When they tried to enter college, their friendships were inconsistent with their immigration status, and they faced a political storm after police immigrants in Denver, Mexico.
Henrique 's mother left herself from Honduras at the age of five, worked in the United States, and sent the money home to help a young son. At the age of 16, Enrique departed by himself, drove a Mexican freight train with only his mother's phone number, wanted to find her across the border. On the way he was threatening the lives of many immigrant children trying to move north, facing a train route, robbery, a gangsters ruling corrupt police and going to the north. This truth story details the experience of unaccompanied minors and details on how they go to the border with the United States.
As a border guard, Francisco Cantu learned to follow people through the desert, lead the dead, and send that creature to the detention center. When Cantu quit patrol, he could no longer confront the fear of his profession, he said that once his immigrant friend left never to visit his dying mother in Mexico again, The borders still plagued him. This personal explanation deals damage to violent damage on both sides of the border.
This is an explanation of two young immigrants by educator and journalist Lauren Markham. When the teenager Ernesto Flores finally stood behind El Salvador's brutal gang, he and his same twin brother escaped the country and crossed the Grand River and the Texas desert. In the hands of immigration authorities, they eventually joined them. Brothers in Oakland, California. There, they must utilize new schools and new languages while waiting for their days at the immigration courts in the face of increasingly more coyotes debt. At the same time, the brothers are just normal teenage boys, supporting girls, scoring, and navigating Facebook, and relying on each other.
There are as many as 700,000 immigration cases in this country, and despite the growing number of families crossing the border from Central America, we can not return to the border group. However, experts question the legitimacy and practicality of indefinite detention.
As there were lots of recent news reports from the Mexican and American border, I turned to the book to learn more about the ongoing crisis and affected individuals. Although immigration policies have changed rapidly in the past 30 years, these stories are derived from immigrants from the 1980s to the present and are a powerful representative of the Central American immigration trial and the humanitarian crisis in progress in the border areas . This is the true story of four Mexican high school students (two have legal documents and two do not have legal documents), starting from the first half of high level dance in Denver, Colorado. When they tried to enter college, their friendships were inconsistent with their immigration status, and they faced a political storm after police immigrants in Denver, Mexico.
After the US immigration crisis in 2014, the percentage of American immigrants to the US continued to decline, but the proportion was low. In early 2010, the United States and Mexico continued resistance to all immigrants from Central America. Even during the crisis, both the United States and Mexico did not show immediate immigration policy changes. As of 2014,