Articles

How deported immigrants from the U.S. are influencing the U.S immigration?

by Hudson Mckenzie Lawyers and Solicitors who understand you

The Trump management’s deportation strategies and pomposity have been argumentative since the start. The family separation plan, the zero-tolerance policy, the language cataloging immigrants as “animals” all known to be an attempt to curb the number of illegal immigrants to the US, asylum seekers and single handed minors who arrive in the United States.

In spite of this, the exercise of deporting migrants, particularly those convicted of crimes, has long been an inherentpart of U.S. immigration policy. Between 1996 and 2015 the U.S. deported almost 5.4 million people to their countries of origin; 40 percent — nearly 2.4 million — had committed a criminal offense.

Although few would disapprove the practice of deporting criminals, a research conducted by leading immigration lawyers in UK finds that this constituent of border control policy leads to a vicious cycle. Deportations include sending back the criminals to their home countries. In some cases, those deported criminals help develop and extend criminal networks used to traffic drugs, weapons, and people. This, in turn, increases the frequency of violent crime in those countries — which sends more people escaping those countries and migrating to the United States.

Why are so many individuals from Latin America trying to enter the United States? Although some want to be reunited with their families or hope to find better economic opportunities, the vast majority of unauthorized migrants and asylum seekers arriving at the U.S. border are escaping from widespread violence. A majority of people flee Central America’s so-called Northern Triangle — Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala — which are among the most violent places on Earth, with homicide rates approaching that of the world’s most deadly war zones. A large number of solitary Central American minors arriving at the U.S. border since 2014 are trying to seepage either being killed or forced into a gang.

Across countries and over a period of time, violent crime has many reasons. Some factors include whether countries had a past of civil wars, their levels of disparity and the strength of their political schemes. After accounting for all the factors that might explain varied levels of violence in a nation, we still discover that violence — measured as the annual number of homicides per capita — increases primarily as a country receives more criminals deported from the United States.

Deporting convicts increased homicide rates in migrants’ countries of origin. Criminal offenders came back to violent areas with incomplete opportunities, where governments are already facing problems enforcing criminal laws. It’s barely surprising, then, that convicts return to criminal and violent activities.

There has been a noteworthy decline in the number of people looking to move to U.S, as reported by a number of immigration lawyers in UK.


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Created on Nov 19th 2019 02:50. Viewed 374 times.

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