Panel to examine U.S. family detention of refuge seekers
In 2014, 60,000 children and mothers fled Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras, seeking refuge in the U.S. because of gang threats, domestic violence and child abuse in their countries. The Obama administration detained these families for months in prisonlike conditions, often denying them release on bond and inhibiting their ability to apply for political asylum.
On Thursday, April 16, panelists will discuss a national effort being organized by lawyers and activists to end this practice of family detention. “Precarious Lives: Central American Families and the Limits of U.S. Immigration Policy” will be held at 4:30 p.m. in Lewis Auditorium, Goldwin Smith Hall.
“The panelists will examine this national effort through a transnational feminist lens,” says Jane Juffer, director of undergraduate studies for the Feminist, Gender & Sexuality Studies Program(FGSS) in the College of Arts and Sciences. “It’s an effort to ensure that women and children refugees are allowed to exercise their internationally recognized rights to live free from violence and persecution.”
Continue reading about the panel here.















