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Center on Immigration & Child Welfare

Love Without Borders: Grandfamilies and Immigration

By | Child Well-Being, Deportation, Detention, Family Separation, Highlighted Resources, Immigrant Youth, Kinship Care, Legal Professionals, Practice, Practice Highlight, Social Workers, Topics, Youth & Families

Love Without Borders: Grandfamilies and Immigration

Generations United (2018)

This report highlights the additional hurdles faced by grandfamilies who come together as a result of a parent’s detention or deportation. Those hurdles include restricted access to support and services to help meet the children’s needs, language barriers, and fear of government agencies.

Hundreds of Migrant Children Held in U.S. Tent City for Months: Filings

By | In the News

Hundreds of Migrant Children Held in U.S. Tent City for Months: Filings

Tom Hals and Kristina Cooke, U.S. News (October, 2018)

U.S. authorities have held some immigrant children who entered the country illegally and without a parent in a temporary “tent city” in Texas for months, violating a 20-year-old court order on how long minors can be detained, according to court filings by civil rights lawyers and immigration advocates.

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No End in Sight, Why Migrants Give Up on Their U.S. Immigration Cases

By | Deportation, Detention, Federal Policy, Highlighted Resources, Law & Policy, Law/Policy Highlight, Topics

No End in Sight, Why Migrants Give Up on Their U.S. Immigration Cases

Southern Poverty Law Center (October 24, 2018)

Every day, thousands of people are locked away in detention centers – essentially prisons – as they pursue their immigration cases and the hope of a new life in the United States. Many have fled violence and bodily harm in their home countries. But all too often, detained immigrants, particularly in the Deep South, give up on their cases because their conditions of confinement are too crushing to bear.

Reunited Families Grow Desperate In Texas Family Detention Centers

By | In the News

Reunited Families Grow Desperate In Texas Family Detention Centers

Bonnie Petrie, Texas Public Radio (October 24, 2018)

Two family detention centers in Texas currently hold several dozen immigrant families. They had been reunited in July but then officials with Immigration and Customs Enforcement returned them to detention, where they have languished for months.

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Changing Public Charge Immigration Rules: The Potential Impact on Children Who Need Care

By | Child Well-Being, Early Childhood, Federal Policy, Highlighted Resources, Law & Policy, Law/Policy Highlight, Public Charge, Topics

Changing Public Charge Immigration Rules: The Potential Impact on Children Who Need Care

Leah Zallman and Karen Finnegan, California Health Care Foundation (October 23, 2018)

This issue brief discusses how the Trump administration changes to the public charge rule could impact Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP) enrollment among a particularly vulnerable group: low- and moderate-income children “in need of medical attention,” defined as children with a current or recent medical diagnosis, disability, and/or need for specific therapy.

Trump’s Plans to Deter Migrants Could Mean New ‘Voluntary’ Family Separations

By | In the News

Trump’s Plans to Deter Migrants Could Mean New ‘Voluntary’ Family Separations

Miriam Jordan, Caitlin Dickerson and Michael D. Shear, The New York Times ( October 22, 2018)

The Trump administration, facing a surge in migrant families entering the United States, is moving swiftly to examine an array of new policies it hopes will deter Central Americans from journeying north.

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Immigrant children still being drugged at shelter despite judge’s order, lawyers say

By | In the News

Immigrant children still being drugged at shelter despite judge’s order, lawyers say

The government is violating a federal judge’s order to stop medicating immigrant children held at a troubled Texas shelter without proper consent and to move the children to other housing, attorneys for the children allege in new court filings.

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