____________________________________
 (http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/calendar/Calendar.php) 

Please post your  immigrant action _calendar_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/calendar/EventPublish.php)   items  
Summer 2012 National  Immigrant Solidarity Network Monthly News Digest and 
News  Alert! 
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No Immigrant Bashing! Support Immigrant  Rights!
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Summer 2012 U.S. Immigrant  Alert! Newsletter 
Published by National Immigrant  Solidarity Network 
Please Our  Newsletter: 
_http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Summer12.pdf_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Summer12.pdf)  
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_Past  NISN Digests_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Summer12NewsAlert.html#past) 
 
____________________________________
Dream Come True: Obama Administration  Announces Relief for DREAMers! BUT 
SB 1070 Continue, DREAM Still Long Ways  to Go ! 
In This Issue: 
1) Dream Come True ! 
2) Relief for  DREAMers 
3) Civil Rights Coalition’s Case Against SB 1070
4)  NY court upholds Lynn Steward's 10-year prison sentence 
5) USA  Prison Industrial Complex Moves South 
6) The Rise of Asian  Americans
7) Vincent Chin
8) Free Legal Clinics for  Undocumented Youth
9) Updates, _Please  Support NISN!_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Summer12NewsAlert.html#donate)  
_Subscribe  the Newsletter!_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Summer12NewsAlert.html#newsletter)   
Please  download our latest newsletter: 
_http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Summer12.pdf_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Summer12.pdf) 

Dreams can Come True, Still Long  Ways to Go ! 
Border Angels 
The President just announced that he's going to stop deporting us  
DREAMers. We've heard promises like this before. Now, we need to make this  
promise 
real. Tell President Obama and the world that you will be watching  to make 
sure to not one more DREAMer gets deported. 
Through the Right to Dream campaign, through actions in Obama campaign  
offices, through the cover of TIME magazine, we've demanded action from  the 
President, and we've finally built enough power, in part through the  growing 
Latino vote, to get it. 
It would be easy to stop here and celebrate the President's words, but  
we're 1.2 million deportations past words at this point. We have to send  the 
country a message that while we appreciate the President's  announcement 
today, we won't stop fighting for change until we see it. 
That's why I need you to tell the President, Congress and other leaders  in 
this nation that you stand with me, and millions of undocumented people  
who have become Americans, even if we don't have papers that recognize us  as 
such. If you tell them that you stand with us, you'll be sending a  message, 
and that you'll continue to fight against every deportation. Tell  them, 
now, and tell all your friends to do the same, Presente  
_http://act.presente.org/sign/withdreamers_ 
(http://act.presente.org/sign/withdreamers)   
____________________________________
  
Arizona Immigration Law Ruling May Mean Boon For  Private Prison Business  
Chris Kirkham - Huffington Post 
06/25/2012 
As the Supreme Court upheld a central provision of Arizona's  controversial 
immigration law on Monday -– a requirement for law  enforcement to check 
the legal status of suspected undocumented immigrants  -- a powerful corporate 
lobby may stand to benefit: the private prison  industry.

For-profit prison companies including Corrections  Corporation of America 
and the GEO Group Inc. have capitalized on the  immigration crackdown over 
the past decade, now controlling nearly half of  the nation's vast immigrant 
detention system. Both companies have more  than doubled revenues from the 
business of detaining immigrants since  2005, collecting hundreds of millions 
of dollars in federal contracts with  Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Some immigration reform  advocates and lawyers have argued that the 
upholding of the so-called  "show me your papers" portion of Arizona's SB 1070 
may 
bring more  undocumented immigrants into the web of federal immigration 
enforcement,  resulting in increased detentions and deportations.

"This is really  the pointy end of the sword of SB 1070," said Ali Noorani, 
executive  director of the National Immigration Forum, an immigrants' 
rights group.  "It provides a real boon, a real growth opportunity for the 
private prison  industry in the State of Arizona."

A Corrections Corporation of  America spokesman said that "under 
longstanding policy, CCA does not and  has not ever taken positions on or 
promoted any 
sentencing or detention  legislation." A spokesman for the GEO Group did 
not respond to questions.  In the past, CCA officials have stressed that the 
federal government, not  local law enforcement, makes the ultimate decision 
on which undocumented  immigrants should be detained.

Federal officials attempted to  assert their authority in Arizona on Monday 
by rescinding previous  agreements with state law enforcement agencies to 
enforce immigration law  at a local level. A senior administration official, 
who spoke to reporters  on condition of anonymity, said Immigration and 
Customs Enforcement has  formally told agents in Arizona to prioritize only the 
most serious  violations referred by local law enforcement. Those include 
potential  undocumented immigrants with a criminal history and repeat border  
crossers.

"We will not allow a state to set our enforcement  priorities," the senior 
administration official said.

Yet legal  observers argue that the federal government's talk of 
prioritizing certain  immigrants is at odds with the recent drive of President 
Barack 
Obama's  administration to appear tough on immigration enforcement. The  
administration has deported record numbers of undocumented immigrants,  
approaching nearly 400,000 each of the last two years, and critics have  said 
the 
increased Arizona enforcement could bring more opportunities for  detention 
and deportation.

"The main issue here is that there  continues to be a focus on deporting a 
lot of people," said Nancy  Morawetz, a professor at the Immigrant Rights 
Clinic at New York  University's School of Law. "There's a sort of pride in 
the number of  people, and a pride in the number of people who happen to come 
in through  an arrest, no matter what the arrest was."

The potential of future  litigation remains likely. Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer 
(R), who signed  Arizona's immigration law in 2010, noted in a statement 
Monday: "Our  critics are already preparing new litigation tactics in response 
to their  loss at the Supreme Court, and undoubtedly will allege inequities 
in the  implementation of the law."

Corrections Corporation of America has  strong ties in Arizona, operating 
three detention centers housing nearly  2,000 undocumented immigrants in the 
state. Dennis DeConcini, a former  Democratic U.S. senator from Arizona, 
sits on CCA's board of directors.  And several CCA lobbyists in Phoenix have 
worked for or consulted with  Brewer.

Critics have questioned CCA's ties to Arizona's law. As  written, the law 
in part mirrors draft model legislation on immigration  enforcement developed 
by the American Legislative Exchange Council, a  group of conservative 
state legislators and business representatives tied  to the drafting of 
Florida's controversial "Stand Your Ground"  law.

Until 2010, a CCA senior director, Laurie Shanblum, sat on the  ALEC 
executive task force for public safety and elections, along with  state Sen. 
Russell Pearce (R), who introduced SB 1070. Parts of the  Arizona law, 
including 
the section upheld by the Supreme Court, are  word-for-word the same as the 
ALEC public safety task force's model  legislation, according to a review of 
documents posted online by the  Center for Media and Democracy, a 
left-leaning advocacy  group.

Machak, the CCA spokesman, said that "any suggested  connection between our 
company and Arizona's immigration law is  baseless."

Though model language developed by ALEC is similar to  the language in SB 
1070, others have taken credit for helping to draft the  law, including 
Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach, who worked as an  immigration advisor to 
U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft during the  George W. Bush presidency. 
Kobach has advised other states and towns in  developing immigration-related 
legislation, including Alabama.

GEO  Group executives in the past have not disputed that enforcement 
efforts  like Arizona's immigration law may have positive impacts on their  
business. In a 2010 GEO Group earnings call after Brewer signed the  Arizona 
law, 
an analyst asked executives whether the new legislation might  affect 
business.

Wayne Calabrese, then the company's chief  operating officer, said the law 
"certainly indicates a level of  frustration by the public," according to a 
transcript of the call. He  added: "I can only believe that the 
opportunities at the federal level are  going to continue apace as a result of 
what's 
happening. ... That to me at  least suggests there's going to be enhanced 
opportunities for what we  do." 
"Private prison companies are very explicit that they think the growth  
area for them is federal detention, and that means primarily immigration  
detention," said Emily Tucker, director of policy and advocacy for  Detention 
Watch Network, an immigrants' rights group. "They're hoping this  will mean 
more contracts for more detention beds. 
 
____________________________________
PEW Research: The Rise of Asian  Americans

[pewsocialtrends.org] Asian  Americans are the highest-income, 
best-educated and fastest-growing racial  group in the United States. They are 
more 
satisfied than the general  public with their lives, finances and the direction 
of the country, and  they place more value than other Americans do on 
marriage, parenthood,  hard work and career success, according to a 
comprehensive 
new nationwide  survey by the Pew Research Center.

A century ago, most Asian  Americans were low-skilled, low-wage laborers 
crowded into ethnic enclaves  and targets of official discrimination. Today 
they are the most likely of  any major racial or ethnic group in America to 
live in mixed neighborhoods  and to marry across racial lines. When newly 
minted medical school  graduate Priscilla Chan married Facebook founder Mark 
Zuckerberg last  month, she joined the 37% of all recent Asian-American brides 
who wed a  non-Asian groom.1

These milestones of economic success and social  assimilation have come to 
a group that is still majority immigrant. Nearly  three-quarters (74%) of 
Asian-American adults were born abroad; of these,  about half say they speak 
English very well and half say they  don’t.

Asians recently passed Hispanics as the largest group of new  immigrants to 
the United States. The educational credentials of these  recent arrivals 
are striking. More than six-in-ten (61%) adults ages 25 to  64 who have come 
from Asia in recent years have at least a bachelor’s  degree. This is double 
the share among recent non-Asian arrivals, and  almost surely makes the 
recent Asian arrivals the most highly educated  cohort of immigrants in U.S. 
history.

Compared with the educational  attainment of the population in their 
country of origin, recent Asian  immigrants also stand out as a select group. 
For 
example, about 27% of  adults ages 25 to 64 in South Korea and 25% in Japan 
have a bachelor’s  degree or more.2 In contrast, nearly 70% of comparably 
aged recent  immigrants from these two countries have at least a bachelor’s  
degree.

Recent Asian immigrants are also about three times as  likely as recent 
immigrants from other parts of the world to receive their  green cards—or 
permanent resident status—on the basis of employer rather  than family 
sponsorship (though family reunification remains the most  common legal gateway 
to the 
U.S. for Asian immigrants, as it is for all  immigrants).

The modern immigration wave from Asia is nearly a half  century old and has 
pushed the total population of Asian Americans—foreign  born and U.S born, 
adults and children—to a record 18.2 million in 2011,  or 5.8% of the total 
U.S. population, up from less than 1% in 1965.3 By  comparison, non-Hispanic 
whites are 197.5 million and 63.3%, Hispanics  52.0 million and 16.7% and 
non-Hispanic blacks 38.3 million and  12.3%.

Asian Americans trace their roots to any of dozens of  countries in the Far 
East, Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent.  Each country of origin 
subgroup has its own unique history, culture,  language, religious beliefs, 
economic and demographic traits, social and  political values, and pathways 
into America.

But despite often  sizable subgroup differences, Asian Americans are 
distinctive as a whole,  especially when compared with all U.S. adults, whom 
they 
exceed not just  in the share with a college degree (49% vs. 28%), but also 
in median  annual household income ($66,000 versus $49,800) and median 
household  wealth ($83,500 vs. $68,529).4

They are noteworthy in other ways,  too. According to the Pew Research 
Center survey of a nationally  representative sample of 3,511 Asian Americans, 
conducted by telephone  from Jan. 3 to March 27, 2012, in English and seven 
Asian languages, they  are more satisfied than the general public with their 
lives overall (82%  vs. 75%), their personal finances (51% vs. 35%) and the 
general direction  of the country (43% vs. 21%).

They also stand out for their strong  emphasis on family. More than half 
(54%) say that having a successful  marriage is one of the most important 
things in life; just 34% of all  American adults agree. Two-thirds of 
Asian-American adults (67%) say that  being a good parent is one of the most 
important 
things in life; just 50%  of all adults agree.

Their living arrangements align with these  values. They are more likely 
than all American adults to be married (59%  vs. 51%); their newborns are less 
likely than all U.S. newborns to have an  unmarried mother (16% vs. 41%); 
and their children are more likely than  all U.S. children to be raised in a 
household with two married parents  (80% vs. 63%).

They are more likely than the general public to live  in multi-generational 
family households. Some 28% live with at least two  adult generations under 
the same roof, twice the share of whites and  slightly more than the share 
of blacks and Hispanics who live in such  households. U.S. Asians also have 
a strong sense of filial respect; about  two-thirds say parents should have 
a lot or some influence in choosing  one’s profession (66%) and spouse (61%).

Read More: 
_http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2012/06/19/the-rise-of-asian-americans/_ 
(http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2012/06/19/the-rise-of-asian-americans/)  
Please download our latest  newsletter: 
_http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Summer12.pdf_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Newsletter/Summer12.pdf) 

 
Past NISN News Letters 
_Spring  2012_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Spring12NewsAlert.html)   
_Winter  2011_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Winter11NewsAlert.html)  | _Summer  
2011_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Summer11NewsAlert.html)  | _Fall  
2011_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Fall11NewsAlert.html)  | _November  
2011_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Nov11NewsAlert.html)  | _Spring  2011_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Spring12NewsAlert.html)  | 
_September  - October 2009_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Sep-Oct09NewsAlert.html)  | _Spring  
2010_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Spring10NewsAlert.html)  | _Fall  
2010_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Fall10NewsAlert.html)  | 
_October-Novermber  10_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Oct-Nov10NewsAlert.html)   
_May  - June 2009_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/May-June09NewsAlert.html)  | _March  - 
April 2009_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/March-April09NewsAlert.html)  | 
_January  - February 2009_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Jan-Feb09NewsAlert.html)  | _November  
- December 
2008_ (http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/News/Nov-Dec08NewsAlert.html) 
 
____________________________________

Useful Immigrant Resources  on Detention and Deportation 
Face Sheet: _Immigration  Detention--Questions and Answers_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/detq&aflier.pdf)  (Dec, 2008) by: 
_http://www.thepoliticsofimmigration.org_ 
(http://www.thepoliticsofimmigration.org/) 

Thanks for GREAT works from Detention Watch  Network (DWN) to compiled the 
following information, please visit DWN  website: 
_http://www.detentionwatchnetwork.org_ (http://www.detentionwatchnetwork.org/)  
  
_Tracking  ICE's Enforcement Agenda_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/4.%20Tracking%20ICE%20Enforcement%20Agenda.doc)
 
_Real  Deal fact sheet on detention_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/5.%20Real%20Deal%20fact%20sheet%20on%20detention.pdf)
 
_Real  Deal fact sheet on border_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/6.%20Real%20Deal%20fact%20sheet%20on%20border.pdf)
   
- _From  Raids to Deportation-A Community Resource Kit_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/39.%20From%20Raids%20to%20Deportation--A%20Com
munity%20Resource%20Kit.pdf) 
- Know Your Rights in  the Community (_English_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/40.%20Know%20your%20Rights%20in%20Community%20--%20Eng
lish.pdf) ,  _Spanish_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/41.%20Know%20Your%20Rights%20in%20Community%20--%20Spanish.pdf)
 )
-  _Know  Your Rights in Detention_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/42.%20Know%20Your%20Rights%20in%20Detention.pdf)
 
- _Pre-Raid  Community Safety Plan_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/43.%20Pre%20Raid%20Community%20Safety%20Plan.pdf)
 
- _Raids  to Deportation Map_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/44.%20Raids%20to%20Deportation%20Map.pdf)
 
- _Raids  to Deportation Policy Map_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/Documents/DWN/45.%20Raids%20to%20Deportation%20Policy%20Map.pdf)
  

More on  Immigration Resource Page
_http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/resource.htm_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/resource.htm)  
Useful Handouts and Know Your Immigrant  Rights When Marches  


Immigrant Marches / Marchas de los Inmigrantes 
(By ACLU)

   EN ESPAÑOL 
_Acerca de  la Union Americana de Libertades  Civiles_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/immigrants/espanol/index.html) 

Immigrants and their supporters are participating in marches all over  the 
country to protest proposed national legislation and to seek justice  for 
immigrants. The materials available here provide important information  about 
the rights and risks involved for anyone who is planning to  participate in 
the ongoing marches. 
If government agents question you, it is important to understand your  
rights. You should be careful in the way you speak when approached by the  
police, FBI, or INS. If you give answers, they can be used against you in  a 
criminal, immigration, or civil case. 
The ACLU's publications below provide effective and useful guidance in  
several languages for many situations. The brochures apprise you of your  legal 
rights, recommend how to preserve those rights, and provide guidance  on 
how to interact with officials. 
IMMIGRATION 
_Know Your Rights When Encountering Law Enforcement_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/kyr_english.pdf)  
|  _Conozca Sus Derechos Frente A Los Agentes Del Orden  Público_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/immigration_kyr_spanish.pdf)  

ACLU of Massachusetts - Your Rights And  Responsibilities If You Are 
Contacted By The Authorities _English_ (http://www.aclum.org/pdf/bustcard.pdf)  
| 
_Spanish_ (http://www.aclu-nj.org/downloads/BustcardSpanish.pdf)  |  
_Chinese_ (http://www.aclum.org/pdf/bustcard.pdf)  

ACLU of  Massachusetts - _What to do  if stopped and questioned about your 
immigration status on the street, the  subway, or the bus_ 
(http://www.aclum.org/pdf/Operation%20Safe%20Commute.pdf)  
| _Que  hacer si Usted es interrogado en el tren o autobus acerca de su 
estatus  inmigratorio_ 
(http://www.aclum.org/pdf/Operation_Safe_Commute_SPANISH.pdf)  

ACLU of South Carolina - _How  To Deal With A 287(g)_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/immigration_287g_english.pdf)  
| _Como  Lidiar Con Una 287(g)_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/immigration_287g_spanish.pdf)  

ACLU of Southern California - _What to Do If Immigration Agents or Police 
Stop You While on  Foot, in Your Car, or Come to Your Home_ 
(http://www.aclu-sc.org/attach/k/kyr_immigration_en.pdf)  
| _Qué Hacer Si Agentes de Inmigración o la Policía lo  Paran Mientras Va 
Caminando, lo Detienen en su Auto o Vienen a su  Hogar_ 
(http://www.aclu-sc.org/attach/k/kyr_immigration_sp.pdf)  

ACLU of Washington - Brochure for Iraqis: What to  Do If the FBI or Police 
Contact You for Questioning _English_ 
(http://www.aclu-wa.org/detail.cfm?id=200)  | _Arabic_ 
(http://aclu-wa.org/detail.cfm?id=354)  

ACLU of  Washington - _Your  Rights at Checkpoints at Ferry Terminals_ 
(http://www.aclu-wa.org/library_files/FerryCheckpointsEng%206-08.pdf)  
| _Sus  Derechos en Puestos de Control en las Terminales de  
Transbordadores_ 
(http://www.aclu-wa.org/library_files/FerryCheckpointsSpan%206-08.pdf)   
LABOR / FREE SPEECH 
_Immigrant Protests - What Every Worker Should Know:  _ 
(http://www.nilc.org/ce/nilc/protests_what_every_worker_should_know.pdf) 
| _Manifestaciones de los Inmigrantes - Lo Que Todo  Trabajador Debe Saber_ 
(http://www.nilc.org/ce/nilc/protests_what_every_worker_should_know_sp.pdf) 
  
PROTESTERS 
ACLU of Florida Brochure - _The Rights of Protesters_ 
(http://www.aclufl.org/PDFs/right_to_protest_brochure.pdf)  
| _Los Derechos de los Manifestantes_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/acluprotestbrochuresp1.pdf)   
STUDENTS 
Washington State - _Student Walkouts and Political Speech at School_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/studentwalkouts20060503.pdf)  
| _Huelgas Estudiantiles y Expresión Política en las  Escuelas_ 
(http://www.aclu.org/pdfs/immigrants/studentwalkouts20060503_spanish.pdf)  

_California Students: Public School Walk-outs and Free  Speech_ 
(http://www.aclu-sc.org/attach/k/KYRCAStudentProtestsEnglish.pdf)  
| _Estudiantes de California: Marchas o Huelgas y La  Libertad de Expresión 
en las Escuelas Públicas_ 
(http://www.aclu-sc.org/attach/k/KYRCAStudentProtestsSpanish.pdf)  

 
____________________________________

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National Immigrant Solidarity Network
No Immigrant  Bashing! Support Immigrant Rights!
webpage: _http://www.ImmigrantSolidarity.org_ 
(http://www.immigrantsolidarity.org/) 
e-mail:  _info@ImmigrantSolidarity.org_ 
(mailto:in...@immigrantsolidarity.org) 

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