Archive for February, 2017

Ireland’s ‘migrant crisis’ is one of equality, not integration – Irish Times

Tue, Feb 28, 2017, 00:00 Updated: about 9 hours ago

A family participates in a Travellers rights protest in Dublin in December 2009. Assimilation policies pursued over the past 50 years are responsible for Travellers terrible health and social status. Photograph: Alan Betson

Whatever is happening elsewhere in Europe, Ireland does not have a migrant crisis. The 2011 census shows that 12 per cent of people living here are of migrant origin. Three-quarters of these are of other white background, 2 per cent are of Asian origin, and just over 1 per cent are African or other black background.

Full integration into society is the best way to ensure the health and wellbeing of these new Irish. Integration is defined in current Irish policy (Integration: A Two Way Process, 1999) as the ability to participate to the extent that a person needs and wishes in all of the major components of society without having to relinquish his or her own cultural identity.

Integration involves changes in Irish society and institutions so that the benefits of diversity are realised. Many countries have had limited success in integrating migrants because they have pursued policies of assimilation (migrants expected to behave like natives) or ghettoisation (migrants kept together in the same locality), with disastrous results. These policies generate deep resentments in migrant populations and huge health and social problems.

A new Migrant Integration Strategy: A Blueprint for the Future was recently launched by the Department of Justice. The strategy includes actions on, among other things, accessing citizenship and strengthening the law in relation to racist behaviour and hate crimes. It also puts the responsibility on local authorities to promptly remove racist graffiti.

The strategy envisages migrants and their children benefitting fully from the education system and participating fully in politics and public life as provided for by law. Integration policies will be mainstreamed in the work of all Government departments, local authorities and other public sector organisations and agencies, such as the HSE.

Although integration is the policy stated in the strategy, some of the language sounds as if assimilation is the real goal. The vision, for example, is that Migrants interact with the host community and participate with them in cultural, sporting and other activities while preserving their own traditions as they wish. There is no mention of native Irish participating on an equal level with migrant cultural activities.

As well, the phrase host community is an unfortunate choice of words, conjuring up images of, at best, natives magnanimously tolerating migrant cultures, and, at worst, parasites feeding on their hosts. It also implies assimilation as migrants will be introduced to Irish society to enable them to adapt to it.

The strategy has a fund of 500,000 for 2017. Grants of up to 5,000 will be provided to community groups for projects to promote integration, which is like giving grants to womens refuges to prevent violence against women when what is needed is a crackdown on perpetrators.

The Government and State agencies must not make the same mistakes with migrants that they made with Irish Travellers. Assimilation policies pursued over the past 50 years are responsible for Travellers terrible health and social status. The most recent report from the ESRI shows that Travellers experience exceptionally strong levels of prejudice.

Only 8 per cent complete second level education. Out of a total health and social care workforce of more than 100,000, only 88 are Travellers. Their health deteriorates very rapidly after the age of 35 because of cumulative disadvantage. The Childrens Rights Alliance Report Card 2017 gave a woeful E? grade, the lowest possible, to Traveller and Roma children. Traveller children leave school an average of five years earlier than non-Travellers. Traveller babies are 3.6 times more likely to die in infancy than non-Traveller babies.

Being Travellers, migrants or Roma is not the problem. First Nations people in Canada, the US and Australia also have poor health because of the assimilation and ghettoisation policies pursued by mainly white immigrants. Being treated unequally and unfairly is the root cause of the health and social problems that develop in these communities.

Without equality, integration will not happen. Unfortunately, the Government strategy says almost nothing on treating migrants equally and fairly. It does recognise the importance of equality of opportunity but does not say how this might come about. Interpreting facilities will be provided so that services can be accessed on an equal basis and thats it.

The strategy must be closely monitored over the next few years to ensure integration is happening. If not, a new strategy must be developed with an emphasis on equality or Ireland will end up with a migrant crisis.

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Ireland's 'migrant crisis' is one of equality, not integration - Irish Times

With His Guests, Trump to Highlight Illegal Immigration as a Security Issue – New York Times


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With His Guests, Trump to Highlight Illegal Immigration as a Security Issue
New York Times
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With His Guests, Trump to Highlight Illegal Immigration as a Security Issue - New York Times

The Fate of the Illegal Immigrants – New York Times


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The Fate of the Illegal Immigrants
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The Fate of the Illegal Immigrants - New York Times

Private Prison Firms Gain as Trump Plans to Crack Down on Crime … – Fox Business

The Trump administrations vow to be tougher on crime and illegal immigration plus his top law enforcement officers endorsement of privately run prisons have sent shares of private prison management companies soaring.

The two leading firms, CoreCivic (CXW) (formerly Corrections Corporation of America) and GEO Group (GEO), essentially have doubled their stock prices since Election Day and are near their 52-week highs. Over the last year CoreCivic shares have jumped 19 percent, while those of GEO are up 68 percent.

Since Trumps election, the market capitalization of GEO has roughly doubled to about $3.7 billion; the market capitalization of CoreCivic is now more than $4 billion.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions recently rolled back an Obama-era directive issued last August that called for phasing out the federal governments use of private prison management firms at the Bureau of Prisons (BOP). Sessions is also a proponent of aggressive enforcement of drug and immigration laws and of taking a no-holds-barred approach to violent crime perpetrators, something that could increase the demand for more prison capacity.

The former Alabama lawmaker said last years move to end BOP contracts which currently includes 12 private contracts for correctional centers that house about 21,000 inmates impaired the Bureaus ability to meet the future needs of the federal correctional system. The BOP has an average of 189,000 people in custody.

Private prison firms handle facilities and detainees for the BOP, the U.S. Marshals Service and the Department of Homeland Security chiefly Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

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ICE relies on private contractors to hold about 60 percent of its detainees, according to Canaccord Genuity strategist Michael Kodesch. As of November of last year (the latest available figure) ICEs average daily detention population was 40,875. CoreCivic and GEO alone have 13,000 beds for immigrant detainees.

Trump plans to add 10,000 immigration officers and 5,000 border control agents, which could increase ICEs average daily detention population.

Housing detained immigrants may well account for the private prison industrys strongest prospects under the Trump administration, Canaccord Genuity strategist Michael Kodesch told Fox News.

When you have the administration ramping up border security and detention, youll have higher criminal alien populations, and youll need those beds. Its a positive headline for prisons, Kodesch said.

He added, however, that Trumps policy wont likely mean an immediate boost to capital improvement budgets for private prisons. Thats because the companies dont often do development based on speculative need, but rather on the procurement of a new contract and immediate demand.

Such speculation may be warranted.

The Obama administrations plan was to phase out private contractors over time, as opposed to cancelling these contracts right away, said Michele Deitch, a senior lecturer at the University of Texas School of Public Affairs and an expert on private prisons. The fact that the attorney general is saying we are planning to expand the federal prison system is very indicative of plans to step up law enforcement and expansion of sentences.

The overall prison population has declined since Obamas Fair Sentencing Act of 2010, which eliminated the five-year mandatory sentence for simple drug possession, among other things.But Trumps immigration orders calling for aggressive tracking down, detention and deportation of illegal immigrants, plus those who have legal status but have committed crimes, are expected to reverse that decline and result in a need for more detention beds.

Both prison companies avoided directly commenting on Trump and Obama but expressed optimism about their future collaboration with the federal government.

Our company welcomes the memorandum by the Attorney General reinstating the continued use of privately operated facilities, which has been long-standing practice and policy at the federal level," Pablo Paez, GEO's vice president of corporate relations said in a statement. "We believe that the decision made last August was based on a misrepresentation of the report issued by the Department of Justice, Office of Inspector General."

Private prisons have their critics, to be sure. The Office of the Inspector General issued a critical report last year of privately run federal facilities. When she was expected to win the election last year, Hillary Clinton expressed a commitment to ending private prisons and immigrant detention, sending shares of companies that depend on federal clients plummeting.

Others say private contractors are better positioned to run jails and detention center.

Private facilities are dedicated ICE detention centers that have things as simple as air conditioningthey also has health screenings and processing abilities for these populations, Kodesh said.

Click here for more reporting from Victoria Craig and Liz Llorente.

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Private Prison Firms Gain as Trump Plans to Crack Down on Crime ... - Fox Business

Report: Trump might call for amnesty for illegal aliens in address to Congress – TheBlaze.com

There are reports that President Trump might call for some kind of amnesty for illegal aliens who have not committed serious crimes in his address to a joint session of Congress Tuesday.

The reports came after journalists attended a White House luncheon Tuesday and cited a senior White House official for the statement on the controversial issue.

NBCs Lester Holt and Chuck Todd are quoting a White House official as saying Trump may issue a call for immigration compromise, while Dara Lind of Vox contributed a full quote from the official, sayingThe time is right for an immigration bill if both sides are willing to compromise.

George Stephanopoulos of NBC characterizedthe White House officials statement as indicating the president believes now may be time for immigration bill that has compromise on all sides.

The word that President Trump may ask lawmakers to tackle comprehensive immigration reform sparked quick reaction up on Capitol Hill, Blitzer said, then asked CNNs senior congressional reporter Manu Raju, Manu what are you hearing?

Well, mixed reaction Wolf, even on the Republican side of the aisle, Raju explained.

Some conservatives who have pushed for tougher border security measures dont want togo this route, including Steve Scalise (R-La.) one of the members of the Republican leadership telling our colleague Deirdre Walsh that, I want us to secure our border, that needs to be our priority, not a compromise bill.

But some other Republicans open to the idea, including Marco Rubio of Florida, who also told our colleague Ashley Killough that actually he could be open to something like this. Of course he tried to cut that immigration deal in 2013. And on the Democratic side a lot of skepticism including from Oregons Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) who I talked to about this idea, possibly of giving legal status to people who are here undocumented but havent committed serious crimes. He wasnt so sure about that idea.

I would have to see the details of any proposal, said Wyden to Raju. Certainly if he is looking at something bipartisan, hes gonna have to walk some of the statements that he has made time after time after time. Which would in effect would say that there would be a lot of focus by immigration authorities like ICE on people who havent committed any serious crimes.

When asked by Raju, Would you be open to any citizenship just legal status? Wyden responded,Id have to see the details.

Indeed and also, Raju continued, the Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer was asked is there any compromise bill that you believe that Donald Trump could get behind that you could get behind, and he said that hes got a lot to undo.'

However, leaks of this nature have come out of the administration many times before and been completely discredited, leading some to speculate that Trump is orchestrating leaksfor the sake of undermining the credibility of the media. And, as some have noted, they could have been reporting on idle speculation by a White House official that was being seriously considered but may not make it into the final draft of the speech.

Trump had called for all illegal aliens to be deported, but has since walked back his position and said that perhaps some could stay if they hadnt committed serious crimes. Many hard-line Republicans are demanding no concessions be given at all to the illegal alien advocates who are now organizing underground railroad homes to house illegals from ICE deportations. Democrats are also planning to bring recipients of Obamas amnesty to Trumps address Tuesday.

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Report: Trump might call for amnesty for illegal aliens in address to Congress - TheBlaze.com