Archive for December, 2014

Follow-Up Analysis Of Immigration Reform By Former Assemblyman | East to West G&E – Video


Follow-Up Analysis Of Immigration Reform By Former Assemblyman | East to West G E
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Follow-Up Analysis Of Immigration Reform By Former Assemblyman | East to West G&E - Video

Monkey Cage: Immigration activists are empowered when they dont fear arrest

By Melissa Michelson December 19 at 11:05 AM

President Obamas dramatic executive action on immigration provided some relief to undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children. His decision was preceded by a long period of activism. In some areas of the country, immigrants of various generations and status, and their friends and families, have worked for decades to build community and political pressure for reform. Political actions have included marches, occupations, and other forms of mobilization and civil disobedience. This organizing has developed the civic engagement and social capital of activists, including the ability to use online and mobile platforms to communicate with tens of thousands of group members. Genevieve Negrn-Gonzales argues that this is due to an internalization of the message to which schoolchildren are socialized in the United Statesthat citizens have the power to make change. Walter J. Nicholls claims the fight for immigration reform has trained young activists how to organize and how to be politically effective.

But that training only occurs in some environments, and not others. In Los Angeles, Calif., and in Austin, Tex., undocumented youth can be, to use the movements slogan, undocumented and unafraid. In contrast, in Southern Texas, or Eastern Washington, they keep their heads down. In the spring of 2006, massive immigration marches were held in cities around the country. But in Hidalgo County in Southern Texas, an area that is 90 percent Hispanic and home to a large undocumented population, the streets were quiet. These differences in levels of civic engagement reflect local political contexts.

Professors Maria Chavez and Jessica Lavariega Monforti and I recently completed a book for which we interviewed 101 undocumented Latino youth. Some live in the heavily Latino and heavily immigrant neighborhoods of Southern Texas and California, while others are from the Pacific Northwest, communities that not only have far fewer Latino immigrants but also very different political cultures.

The interviews we conducted in Texas took place in the southern tip of the state, in the Rio Grande Valley. The context of this geographic location differs from that where our other interviews were conducted in that it is included in the U.S. Border Patrols system of internal checkpoints. This means that undocumented immigrants in the area face the constant threat of detection and deportation, even if they do not attempt to cross the border into Mexico. Undocumented residents of the valley cannot easily travel within the state, even to go up north to cities such as Austin or Houston. This context is reflected in their levels of political engagement and participation.

We asked individuals whether they had engaged in any marches or other action on behalf of immigration reform. Those from Texas were very unlikely to have done so, and noted fears of arrest or deportation. Activity by those in the Pacific Northwest was also minimal; respondents noted the fear of deportation and also the lack of a community with which to take action. Many of our respondents from Oregon and Washington said they instead focus on making others aware of the existence of undocumented immigrants in their schools and neighborhoods.

In contrast, activism was widespread and extensive among our California respondents. Only one of our California respondents reported never having participated in a march or other action; others who had participated in just one or a few marches seemed almost apologetic, as if they felt their involvement was below par. Most reported extensive activism, including not just marches but lobbying, mock graduations, and even hunger strikes. This regional variation in protest activity is reflected in the size and location of the 2006 immigration marches.

People do not become politically socialized in a vacuum; they are influenced by local social and political circumstances. Latinos in California and Texas experience day-to-day life very differently than do Latinos living in the Pacific Northwest; this inevitably affects their feelings of belonging, political empowerment, and Latino identity.

Melissa R. Michelson is Professor of Political Science at Menlo College, andco-author of the award-winning book Mobilizing Inclusion (Yale University Press, 2012)andLiving the Dream (Paradigm Press, 2014).

This post is part of theScholars Strategy Networkseries on civic engagement between elections.

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Monkey Cage: Immigration activists are empowered when they dont fear arrest

Mr. Anthony Verdi & Mr. Nguyen Smith – First Amendment and the Role of Protest; Protest Art – Video


Mr. Anthony Verdi Mr. Nguyen Smith - First Amendment and the Role of Protest; Protest Art
Mr. Anthony Verdi Mr. Nguyen Smith - First Amendment and the Role of Protest; Protest Art.

By: Brian Innis

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Mr. Anthony Verdi & Mr. Nguyen Smith - First Amendment and the Role of Protest; Protest Art - Video

Guy-Uriel Charles comments: Firing of Charlotte city employee over Facebook post highlights First Amendment debate

A City of Charlotte fire investigator is out of a job because of a Facebook post in the aftermath of the Ferguson, Missouri riots. Its the first time a Charlotte city employee has been fired over a posting on social media. An attorney for the investigator says the city overreached.

So what are the First Amendment rights of public employees?

City Manager Ron Carlee says its essential the public is confident that city employees will treat all people with dignity and respect.

He believes Crystal Eschert violated that confidence shortly after police officer Darren Wilson shot and killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.

Eschert is white. She referenced reports of another police shooting near Ferguson that said a white person was the victim. She wrote on her personal Facebook page:

Where is Obama? Where is Holder? Where is Al Sharpton? Where are Trayvon Martin's parents? Where are all the white guy supporters? So WHY is everyone MAKING it a racial issue?!? So tired of hearing its a racial thing. If you are a thug and worthless to society, its not race Youre just a waste no matter what religion, race or sex you are!

Eschert did not identify herself as a Charlotte Fire Department employee, but she was fired in September after someone emailed the post to city officials. Carlee says it was discriminatory and inflammatory.

Guy Charles has a different phrase for it. He co-directs Duke Universitys Center on Law, Race and Politics.

She said something that at best was racially insensitive, but on a public issue on a private page, says Charles. Between the hand that shes holding and the hand that the citys holding, I think Id prefer to have her hand.

If Eschert worked for a private employer, she wouldnt have a free speech case here since the First Amendment only applies to the government. But even though she has that protection, its not absolute.

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Guy-Uriel Charles comments: Firing of Charlotte city employee over Facebook post highlights First Amendment debate

Kerry Kennedy Introduces Hillary Clinton at Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Gala, December 16, 2014 – Video


Kerry Kennedy Introduces Hillary Clinton at Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Gala, December 16, 2014
Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights President Kerry Kennedy introduces former Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton at the 2014 Ripple of Hope Awards Dinner.

By: Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights

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Kerry Kennedy Introduces Hillary Clinton at Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights Gala, December 16, 2014 - Video