The 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act as Antecedent to Contemporary Latina/o/x Migration

Mariela Olivares
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Abstract

This essay focuses on a vital question: what can immigrant advocates learn from the history of immigration law and policy reform? The topic is vast, but in this essay, I offer a brief look at one of the most critical pieces of contemporary legislation — the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act (IRCA). I discuss the effects of IRCA on Latina/o/x migration through a historical and critical legal studies lens. First, I discuss the history of immigration law and policy and the important and undeniable intersections between immigration law and formal and informal racial and ethnic discrimination. I provide a brief review of the history prior to the passage of IRCA to understand the political context of its passage and of its effects. The essay then explores the passage of IRCA and its immediate effects on the legalization of millions of previously undocumented immigrants, while also noting the gendered implications of the legalization program. In fact, IRCA helped set the stage for continued gendered discrimination against women migrants by favoring the traditional male workforce in the agricultural industries. Moreover, despite its antithetical purpose, the legalization program resulted in increased rates of undocumented migration from Central America. Next, the essay contextualizes this historical perspective to more contemporary times by noting how IRCA-era migration trends are reflected in more recent numbers of Central American migration and in current political movements to legalize other sectors of undocumented immigrants, like in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program and the now-failed Deferred Action for Parental Accountability (DAPA) program. More recently, these trends have influenced increased numbers of undocumented families and children to risk migration to the United States. The essay concludes by commenting on the continuation of these entrenched historical trends.
《1986年移民改革和控制法》是当代拉丁裔/非拉丁裔移民的先驱
这篇文章关注的是一个至关重要的问题:移民倡导者可以从移民法和政策改革的历史中学到什么?这个话题很广泛,但在这篇文章中,我将简要介绍当代立法中最重要的部分之一——1986年的《移民改革与控制法案》(IRCA)。我通过历史和批判性法律研究的视角讨论了IRCA对拉丁/o/x移民的影响。首先,我讨论了移民法律和政策的历史,以及移民法与正式和非正式的种族和民族歧视之间重要和不可否认的交集。我简要回顾了IRCA通过之前的历史,以了解其通过的政治背景及其影响。然后,本文探讨了IRCA的通过及其对数百万先前无证移民合法化的直接影响,同时也注意到合法化计划的性别含义。事实上,IRCA通过支持农业行业的传统男性劳动力,帮助为对妇女移民的持续性别歧视奠定了基础。此外,尽管其目的是相反的,但合法化计划导致中美洲无证移民率上升。接下来,本文将这一历史观点置于更现代的时代背景下,注意到irca时代的移民趋势如何反映在最近的中美洲移民数量和当前的政治运动中,以使其他部门的无证移民合法化,如童年入境者暂缓行动(DACA)计划和现已失败的父母责任暂缓行动(DAPA)计划。最近,这些趋势影响了越来越多的无证家庭和儿童冒险移民到美国。文章最后对这些根深蒂固的历史趋势的延续进行了评论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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