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DREAMer
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<strong>Mundo Citizen</strong></p>
<p>The requirement of revalidation of foreign studies is the greatest obstacle faced by Dreamers as they seek full recognition of their U.S. education in Mexico.</p>
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<strong>Fronteras Desk</strong></p>
<p><strong>MEXICO CITY</strong> — There’s been a lot of debate lately about President Barack Obama’s executive action that will grant legal status to some undocumented immigrants. It builds upon an earlier program that aided young immigrants brought here illegally as children.</p>
<p>But some young people were deported before they could take advantage of that program. Now those deportees are speaking out.<br>
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<strong>Coachella Unincorporated</strong></p>
<p><strong>SALINAS</strong> — By the time Alma Torres turned 12, her father had been back and forth between the family’s home in Michoacan, Mexico and the United States so many times that he decided it would be best to just bring the entire family to live with him in King City, California.</p>
Commentary:
Al Día
For immigration reform to mean anything it’s got to make it easier for all undocumented immigrants to regularize their status in the United States — not just DREAM-Act eligible young people.
By Nancy Landa
MundoCitizen
(Editor’s note: DREAMer Nancy Landa’s first-hand experience of removal proceedings by US Citizens and Immigration Services (USCIS))