undocumented
After months of haggling and debate from both sides regarding the controversial topic of immigration reform, a group of bipartisan senators have come up with a proposal for fixing the immigration system--one that includes a path to citizenship, with better secured borders.
The call for changes to the nation's broken immigration system is growing louder with each week.
Days after her family was detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers in Arizona, a prominent young Arizona immigration activist has joined a newly elected Arizona Congresswoman's office.
President Obama's previous pledge to enact comprehensive immigration reform looks to be gaining steam, the Obama administration reportedly planning to push an extensive overhaul in immigration to Congress that would include a pathway to citizenship for millions of immigrants.
The arrest of a well-known immigration activist's mother during a nighttime raid in Arizona has drawn attention and a huge outpouring of supporters calling for her release.
Nearly 3,000 armed volunteers will be patrolling outside of roughly 60 Arizona schools after Maricopa County Sheriff Joe Arpaio gave them the go-ahead this week.
The new immigration law that allows certain undocumented immigrants to stay in the United States while applying for permanent visas is drawing mostly positive reaction, but immigration experts and critics say that more is needed if there is to be true reform to the broken immigration system.
Lines in the sand are expected to be drawn in Washington in the battle to reform immigration.
A new law modeled after Arizona's controversial S.B. 1070 law could have a direct impact on Kansas immigrants if legislators in the Sunflower State decide to pass it.
Just days after a new law passed designed to make it easier for immigrants with family members in the U.S. to be reunited with their loved ones, the new regulation is drawing reaction from both supporters and critics.
Immigrants with spouses, children and parents in the U.S. may not have to wait much longer to get their much sought-after green cards, thanks to a new change in immigration policy.
Starting next year, federal immigration officials will be cutting back its support of programs that give local police the authority to question individuals about immigration statuses and arrest them based on that.
The official numbers are in, and according to them, federal officials have deported more immigrants in the past fiscal year than ever before.
With a federal judge lifting an injunction this week, Georgia law enforcement officials can start enforcing the controversial "show-me-your-papers" law.
New Americans campaign launches citizenship drive