Dallas ‘decompression center’ can’t become another prison for migrant youth

March 27, Natalie Nanasi, assistant professor of law at the SMU Dallas Dedman School of Law, for a commentary cautioning U.S. immigration officials that “decompression centers” — such as the one at Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas housing over 3,000 unaccompanied teen boys — ought to be temporary and not allowed to become like a prison.  Published in The Hill: http://bit.ly/3rrLaTG

The green cots  — 2,300 of them to be exact — are what throw you off when you enter the Kay Bailey Hutchison Convention Center in Dallas.

The venue usually hosts auto shows or conventions where industry types talk shop. But this March weekend, the cavernous Hall D morphed into a temporary home for thousands of unaccompanied boys from Central America — fresh faces and reminders of generations of failed immigration policy that continues to afflict the lives of migrants in the margins.

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New Trump immigration regulations would devastate refuge pathways

June 16, Natalie Nanasi, professor at SMU Dedman Law School with a specialty in immigration, for a piece critical of proposed new Trump Administration regulations that would devastate asylum pathways for refugees. Published in The Hill: https://bit.ly/2YK2aIo

After three and a half years of methodically chipping away at the rights and dignity of asylum seekers, the Trump administration has achieved its coup de grâce. Last week, the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security issued draft regulations that could effectively eradicate asylum law as we know it. 

The 161-paged document impacts nearly 900,000 individuals with pending asylum applications and countless others who may seek protection in the United States from persecution or torture they face in their home countries. . .

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