Family Matters: Claiming Rights across the US-Mexico Migratory System

J. Hagan, Ricardo D. Martínez-Schuldt, A. Peavey, Deborah M. Weissman
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

The Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (INA) created an immigration system favoring the immigration of spouses, children, and parents of US citizens, thereby establishing family unity as the cornerstone of US immigration policy. Despite this historical emphasis on family unity, backlogs and limited visas for non-immediate relatives of US citizens and legal permanent residents, the militarization of the US-Mexico border, punitive measures for those who enter without inspection, such as the forced separation of children from their parents at the US border, and an aggressive policy of deportation have made it more difficult for members of Mexican binational families to unify. How do members of Mexican binational families manage the hardships that result from US immigration policies that prolong and force family separation? Immigrants and return migrants alike may not be aware of their rights and the legal remedies that exist to enforce them. Structural barriers such as poverty, legal status, fear of deportation, lack of proficiency in English, and lack of familiarity with government bureaucracies no doubt prevent many migrants in the United States and return migrants in Mexico from coming forward to request legal assistance and relief in the courts. Despite these barriers, when it comes to family matters, members of some Mexican binational families can and do assert their rights. In this article, we analyze an administrative database of the Department of Legal Protection of the Mexican consular network that documents migrant legal claims resulting from family separation, along with findings from 21 interviews with consular staff and community organizations in three consular jurisdictions — El Paso, Raleigh, and San Francisco — to investigate the sociolegal processes of claims. Our investigation centers on the mediating role the Mexican state — via its consular network — has developed to assist binational families as they attempt to assert their rights and resolve child support and child custody problems resulting from prolonged and forced family separation. We find that the resolution of binational family claims in part depends on the institutional infrastructure that has developed at local, state, and federal levels, along with the commitment and capacity of the receiving and sending states and the binational structures they establish. These binational structures transcend the limitations of national legal systems to achieve and implement family rights and obligations across borders.
家庭事务:在美国-墨西哥移民系统中主张权利
1952年的《移民与国籍法》(INA)创建了一个有利于美国公民的配偶、子女和父母移民的移民制度,从而将家庭团结确立为美国移民政策的基石。尽管历来强调家庭团结,但美国公民和合法永久居民的非直系亲属的积压和签证限制,美墨边境的军事化,对未经检查进入的人的惩罚措施,如在美国边境强迫儿童与父母分离,以及激进的驱逐政策,使得墨西哥两国家庭成员更难团聚。美国移民政策延长和强迫家庭分离,墨西哥双国籍家庭成员如何应对由此带来的困难?移民和返回的移民都可能不知道他们的权利和现有的法律补救措施来执行这些权利。诸如贫穷、法律地位、害怕被驱逐、英语不熟练以及对政府官僚机构不熟悉等结构性障碍无疑阻止了许多在美国的移民和在墨西哥的返乡移民向法院请求法律援助和救济。尽管存在这些障碍,但在涉及家庭事务时,一些墨西哥两国家庭的成员能够而且确实维护了自己的权利。在本文中,我们分析了墨西哥领事网络法律保护部门的行政数据库,该数据库记录了因家庭分离而导致的移民合法索赔,以及对埃尔帕索、罗利和旧金山三个领事管辖区的领事工作人员和社区组织进行的21次访谈的结果,以调查索赔的社会法律程序。我们的调查集中在墨西哥政府通过其领事网络发展起来的调解作用上,帮助跨国家庭维护自己的权利,解决由于长期和被迫的家庭分离而造成的儿童抚养和监护问题。我们发现,解决两国家庭索赔问题在一定程度上取决于在地方、州和联邦各级发展起来的体制基础设施,以及接受国和派遣国的承诺和能力以及它们建立的两国结构。这些两国结构超越了国家法律制度的限制,跨越国界实现和执行家庭权利和义务。
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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