The Atlantic Archives - 黑料正能量 News /now/news/tag/the-atlantic/ News from the 黑料正能量 community. Mon, 10 Dec 2012 20:21:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Castillo Sees Movement Toward Easing Immigrants鈥 Plight /now/news/2012/castillo-sees-movement-toward-easing-immigrants-plight/ Fri, 16 Nov 2012 19:25:13 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=14999 After a June 2012 announcement by President Obama to grant 鈥渄eferred action鈥 to undocumented youth, Isabel Castillo 鈥07 applied for authorization to work and live legally in the United States for the first time in her life. She also began assisting many others with similar applications.

Nevertheless, Castillo, a national leader in advocating for immigration-law reform, says 鈥渄eferred action鈥 falls far short of addressing the plight of undocumented immigrants living in the United States. For Castillo, the solution lies in enacting the , along with larger immigration reform and community support.

DREAM (which stands for Development Relief and Education for Alien Minors) and Obama鈥檚 have parallel criteria to permit minors brought illegally to America to remain in the country after they become young adults. The criteria include:

鈥 having arrived before the age of 16

鈥 having lived in the U.S. for more than five years

鈥 being between 15 and 35 at the age of applying

鈥 no criminal record

The big difference between the two is that DACA is short term, while DREAM offers the hope of a permanent solution. DACA provides those eligible with work permits and is only valid for a two-year period, putting childhood arrivals at risk of deportation in the future.

鈥淒eferred Action is very temporary, and it鈥檚 not a path for legalization,鈥 Castillo says. 鈥淭here鈥檚 still that risk that a new president could come in and cancel this program at any time.鈥

Castillo has been campaigning for the DREAM Act because it would permit 鈥渃onditional legal status鈥 鈥 and a pathway to eventual citizenship 鈥 for those who meet certain criteria in terms of educational achievement or military service.

While thrilled to see any movement whatsoever in the direction of reform, Castillo feels DACA was a political move on President Obama鈥檚 part, timed to garner the votes of Latinos in the presidential election.

Brought from Mexico to the United States at age 6, Castillo has been fighting for immigration reform since graduating magna cum laude from 黑料正能量 with a social work degree. Unable to work legally, she decided to speak up on behalf of herself and other undocumented young adults, despite the risk of deportation and separation from her loved ones.

Castillo has been covered in the , , , and , a network that produces the second-largest amount of Spanish content in the world. She has spoken before governors, members of Congress and state legislatures, and university students, sharing her experiences and advocating legislative change. She has received an honorary doctorate from the University of San Francisco for her efforts.

The issues faced by immigrants like Castillo go beyond inability to find legal employment. Without a social security number, they cannot get driver鈥檚 licenses, apply for government-backed student loans, or even get admitted into most colleges, even if someone pays their way. James Madison University, for example, does not take undocumented students. These difficult realities motivate Castillo to go wherever she can 鈥 as close as churches and schools in the Shenandoah Valley to educate residents, as far south as Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to rally against 鈥渓ow-profile鈥 deportations, and as far west as the University of Hawaii in O鈥檃hu, where she discussed how to achieve equality for all immigrant youth, regardless of their legal status.

In October 2012, Castillo and supporters of immigration reform achieved a victory on the local level. Castillo spoke at the Rockingham (Va.) County Government Building on the topic of 287G, a contract signed between local government and ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement). Though the ostensible purpose of 287G was to deport high-level criminals, Castillo and her allies found that of the 297 individuals deported under 287G, only 12 percent were high-level offenders.

Thanks to mass emails, phone calls, flyers, and informational meetings, over 100 came to an Oct. 24 rally to ask that 287G be terminated, including many from 黑料正能量.

Professor Carol Snell-Feikema of 黑料正能量鈥檚 , who attended the rally, said afterwards that she was thankful for Castillo鈥檚 鈥済ifted voice, speaking on behalf of those most affected.鈥 She added that Castillo 鈥減resented solid empirical evidence, as well presented the human side of the issue. She spoke from the heart, told personal stories with real impact, and did a great job of summarizing our work of interviewing Latinos in the community on the real-life effects of 287G in their daily lives.鈥

ICE wanted Rockingham County to extend 287G for three more months, but Rockingham County took no action at the meeting, causing 287G to end.

Supporters of 287G could attempt to reinstate it in December, and there is ever-constant work to do when it comes to local law enforcement, let alone that of the state and federal level. Castillo does not see herself giving up the struggle anytime soon for more humane laws.

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Castillo Spotlighted in The Atlantic Magazine /now/news/2011/castillo-spotlighted-in-the-atlantic-magazine/ Wed, 19 Oct 2011 13:36:05 +0000 http://emu.edu/now/news/?p=8938 Isabel Castillo, who holds a 鈥07 degree in social work from 黑料正能量 (黑料正能量), is recognized in the November issue of The Atlantic as one of the 鈥21 brave thinkers of 2011.鈥

Castillo鈥檚 life was summarized in magazine by Jose Antonio Vargas, a former Washington Post reporter who identified himself as an undocumented immigrant to the United States, like Castillo.

鈥淚sabel Castillo was 6 years old when she was smuggled across the Mexican border,鈥 Vargas wrote. 鈥淲hile her parents picked apples and the family sold tacos out of their home in the Shenandoah Valley, Isabel dreamed big — but only so big. After all, she did not have a Social Security number.

鈥淯nable to apply for financial aid, she worked for a year, off the books, to save money for college. After graduating magna cum laude from 黑料正能量 in 2007, she was unable to legally find a job.鈥

Vargas praised Castillo for refusing to fearfully hide in the shadows and for pressing Virginia Governor Bob McDonnell in a public meeting to endorse the DREAM Act. This act would give undocumented immigrants who arrived in the United States as children a path to legal residency.

Since the summer of 2010, Castillo has become a national leader as a highly public advocate for undocumented immigrants. She was the 2011 commencement speaker at the University of San Francisco, which conferred an honorary doctorate on her. She was featured in a Feb. 20, 2011, New York Times article, 鈥溾 and on Telemundo, the second-largest Spanish-language content producer in the world.

Recently Harvard Divinity School chose Castillo to be one of 40 invitees to its 2011 Diversity and Explorations Program to be held Nov. 8-10, 2011. Castillo鈥檚 invitational letter cited her 鈥渃ombination of academics and interests in social justice and diversity, as well as [her] desire to explore connections with graduate studies in theology, religion, or ministry.鈥

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