Social Workers Fighting for Safe Borders
Safety Sought From the Elements, Vigilante Border Guards
Responding to human rights abuses is part of the responsibility
of social workers.
By Lyn Stoesen, News Staff
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| John Michael Yanson |
While immigration has always been an intrinsic part of domestic
politics in the United States, the issue has heated up in recent
years with heightened border restrictions and the advent of vigilante
border guards. In response, humanitarian groups have stepped up
efforts to prevent the unnecessary deaths of border crossers,
and social workers are playing an important role in that work.
A complex issue. A recent poll conducted by The Washington
Post and ABC News shows that Americans are conflicted on the issue
of immigration. The poll "found Americans alarmed by the
federal government's failure to do more to block the flow of illegal
immigration and critical of the impact of illegal immigration
on the country but receptive to the aspirations of undocumented
immigrants living and working in the United States," the
Post reported on Jan. 2.
The poll found that three in five Americans believe undocumented
workers should be given the opportunity to keep their jobs and
eventually apply for legal status in the United States.
Carol Stambaugh, executive director of NASW's Arizona Chapter,
said that in her state, immigration is "a complicated political
issue." She said she believes some of the vigilante action
is taking place "because there are people who are frustrated.
They're saying no one else is protecting their land, so they will."
Leticia Diaz, NASW senior policy adviser in the Department of
Human Rights and International Affairs, acknowledged that "immigration
is historically a complex issue." Throughout the nation's
history, she said, immigration and the place of immigrants within
society has time and again flared up as an emotionally volatile
question.
Diaz noted that many of the concerns about immigration are related
to the country's economy and worries that immigrants are taking
jobs from citizens. Many businesses, however, including agriculture
and the service industries, rely on the cheap labor that immigrants
— some of them undocumented — are able to provide. "Undocumented
immigrants actually help the United States stay economically competitive,"
Diaz explained.
But she also pointed out that opposition to Mexican border crossers
also has a racial element. "Eastern European immigrants,
many of whom are also undocumented, don't get the same attention,"
Diaz said. "It's with regard to low-income, dark-skinned
immigrants that big problems are created.
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From February 2006 NASW News. © 2006 National
Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. NASW News
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