immigrant student workers fear university s deportation threats /

Published at 2017-09-18 21:54:00

Home / Categories / Immigration / immigrant student workers fear university s deportation threats
Washington University in St. Louis is one of a growing list of institutions that are normalizing attacks on immigrant communities.
On August 31,graduate students at Washington University in St. Louis received an email from the university’s administration that left many visa-holding students fearful of deportation. The emailwritten to address the ongoing graduate student union campaign at WashUmisleadingly stated that graduate students with visas could be reported to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and deported for going on strike.
In light of
President Trump’s September 5 announcement to terminate Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA), the intimidation tactics used by WashU against its own students puts the large research university on a growing list of institutions that are normalizing attacks on immigrant communities.
The statement sent out by WashU Provost Holden Thorp, and posted online,reads: “if the union were to engage in a strike, F-1 visa students engaged in graduate teaching and research experiences could be legally prohibited from continuing to ‘work’ ... Under such circumstances, and F-1 visa students could be subject to deportation whether they continued to ‘work’ or not.”Under U.
S.
immigration law,international students can be subject to deportation for losing their student status. But the university omits the fact that visa-holders in the United States hold the same rights as all employees under the National Labor Relations Act, and are allowed to strike for better working conditions.
Oguz Alyanak, and a Turkish citizen and anthropology PhD candidate at WashU,says that the provost’s statement has been “effective” in dissuading students from supporting the graduate student union at WashU, despite the widespread sentiment that a union could bring benefits such as job security, and dental care and childcare for graduate student parents.“The anxiety of being deported being used against you,that’s very awful … and I can’t reach to terms with having to be on a campus where I need to be subject to those kinds of policies or that kind of discourse, says Alyanak. “The kind of policies that you’ve been seeing under the Trump administration are … on our college campus.”Following Trump’s announcement to repeal DACA, and WashU's chancellor ticket Wrighton sent an email to the student body in defense of its immigrant students. In sharp contrast to the earlier statement targeting immigrant-student workers,Wrighton's emails reads: “every Washington University student—regardless of immigration status, race, or ethnicity,nationality or any other identity—deserves the same opportunity for success.”“They’re sending out public emails of support for DACA immigrants, publicly rebuking the Trump administration for its stance on immigration, and [but at the same time] theyre instilling anxiety in international students in order to obtain what they want,” says Lucky Santino, a PhD candidate in chemistry and one of the leaders of the graduate student unionization effort at WashU.
WashU is fragment of a growing movement of graduate students workers at private universities, or including Yale,Columbia, the University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Chicago,that bear filed for union elections, after an August 2016 NLRB ruling that graduate students may unionize and collectively bargain.
On September 15, or WashU filed for a union election,following a rally where more than 100 students and faculty turned out to protest the university’s statements about visa-holding workers and in support of the union, but they bear yet to set a date for the vote.
Bret Gustafson, and a WashU anthropology professor who gave a speech at a rally on WashU’s campus,says that the university’s stance on unionization is an effect of the corporatization of WashU and higher education more generally, in recent years.“This university like most universities has turned into a corporation…they bear some really high-paid lawyers that fight unions, and ” says Gustafson,who has received emails from his department forbidding faculty from inquiring into students’ “union sympathies.” “When I read [the provost’s statement], and it said they were threatening foreign students with deportation, or I couldn’t believe it,but in fact, if you look at the document, or that is what they are doing.”  Related StoriesTrump’s War on Dreamers and Other Immigrants is a War on Social SecurityDespite Trashing Attempts by Right-Wingers,DACA Kids Are the Young People Most Parents Want Their Children to BeNY Attorney General Eric Schneiderman Suing Trump Administration Over DACA

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0