Reforming America's Immigration Laws
Washington, D.C. - There are roughly 19 million immigrant women and girls currently in the U.S. Immigrant women, particularly the undocumented, are often more vulnerable than their male counterparts, lack the same economic opportunities, and experience exploitation while crossing the border, while working and even in their own homes. In short, immigrant women have become the silent victims of a broken immigration system.
In IPC's latest Special Report, Reforming America's Immigration Laws: A Woman's Struggle, immigration attorney Kavitha Sreeharsha lays out the economic and social disparities, legal barriers and the many dangers hard-working immigrant women living in the U.S. are forced to endure.
The report also explores how women are distinctly harmed by heightened enforcement of immigration laws. Abusers, traffickers, and exploitative employers keep immigrant women from seeking local law-enforcement protection by convincing them that police officers are working in partnership with DHS and will deport victims instead of protecting them.
Essentially, these enforcement measures increase the likelihood of abuse and assault against immigrant women by cutting them off from help and giving their perpetrators a powerful tool to silence their victims and escape prosecution.
Ultimately, the author concludes, only through a comprehensive immigration reform package - one that includes a path to legalization and values the contributions immigrant women make as mothers, wives and workers - can we reconcile these disparities.
To read this Special Report, see:
http://www.immigrationpolicy.org/sites/def...

Brother Earl,
If it were that simple, then the US Immigration wouldn't be up for revamping. Black Americans are so lucky that we can make simplistic statements about people who want to make better lives for themselves and their families. Oh well I'm not mad at you for your comment, but it seems a bit shallow coming from you though.