Self-deportation

Self-deportation is an approach to dealing with unauthorized immigration, used in the United States and the United Kingdom, that allows an otherwise inadmissible person to voluntarily depart a country for which they have no legal ties to rather than face removal proceedings in front of the native court system. It became associated with unauthorized immigration to the United States in the 1990s.

History

This term was used as early as 1984 in a People article about the film director Roman Polanski, which referred to his self-deporting.[1] The term gained its current association with unauthorized immigration in the 1990s, especially in California. In 1994, William Safire described its usage by California governor Pete Wilson's immigration strategy, exemplified by Proposition 187, which prevented unauthorized aliens from using a variety of state social services. Safire summarized the philosophy of the approach as holding that "the most cost-effective way to change behavior is to make life unbearable under present behavior."[2][3] The same year, Lalo Alcaraz and Esteban Zul launched a satirical campaign involving a character named "Daniel D. Portado" (a pun on deportado, Spanish for deported), who facetiously promoted self-deportation.[3][4]

gollark: Did you know that GNU Yes can print `y\n` at 3GB/s, which is something like 5% of the maximum achieved `y\n` printing speed?
gollark: On the plus side, GNU Yes is quite good.
gollark: (especially since a lot of software will now just do "0" or "some random number not corresponding to the error")
gollark: Also, exit codes are quite bee.
gollark: You also need `-o pipefail` or something or things.

See also

References

  1. Mano, D. Keith (5 March 1984). "Roman Polanski". People. Retrieved 25 June 2012.
  2. Safire, William (21 November 1994). "Essay; Self-Deportation?". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2012.
  3. Mackey, Robert (1 February 2012). "The Deep Comic Roots of 'Self-Deportation'". The New York Times. Retrieved 25 June 2012.
  4. "News Flash: The Real Inventor of "Self-Deportation"". This American Life. 31 January 2012. Retrieved 25 June 2012.


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