Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

A New Fix to an Old Problem

Posted: 9th June 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized

Frontier Justice: The Global Refugee Crisis and What to Do About It By Andy Lamey (Doubleday Canada, 416 pp., $39.95) Since the end of World War II, there hasn’t been a time when refugees and asylum seekers didn’t factor into national politics. First, there were Jewish refugees escaping the Nazis. Then there were those fleeing […]

Hope

Posted: 22nd May 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized

It’s graduation season. Famous people are out making commencement speeches and images of bright shiny students in their caps and gowns populate the evening news. Job prospects for new college graduates aren’t the best, but that’s not stopping people from crossing the stage to pick up their diplomas. The truth is, even in a recession, […]

Human Rights on the High Seas

Posted: 15th May 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized

By now, we’ve all heard of the boats leaving Libya and Tunisia bound for Malta and Italy’s Lampedusa. It’s not a particularly new phenomenon, though the increased numbers resulting from the Arab Spring upheavals are.  This week, though, more than one actor chose to ignore a failing boat of refugees adrift in the Mediterranean, resulting […]

The End of DOMA?

Posted: 8th May 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized

This week, Attorney General Eric Holder continued to chip away at the Defense of Marriage Act. While not a big story when compared with the demise of Osama bin Laden, the weakening of this ugly piece of legislation means a great deal to a great many.  On Thursday, Holder vacated a Board of Immigration Appeals […]

Muslims, Boats and Borders

Posted: 10th April 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized
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Lampedusa. It’s a tiny Italian island that lies closer to North Africa than it does to the Italian mainland.  European vacationers know it as a holiday destination.  Thousands of African economic migrants and asylum seekers know it as their best hope to enter Europe. Since mid-February, this image has become more reflective of Lampedusa than […]

In-State Tuition & the Undocumented Student

Posted: 3rd April 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized

After the DREAM Act died last spring, it seemed little hope existed for kids brought to this country illegally by their parents. Stuck somewhere in between the countries they were born in and the country they grew up in, undocumented students lacked options following high school. This legislative season is, however, offering some surprises, including […]

Kyoko’s Calendar

Posted: 20th March 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized
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When I read about a displaced Japanese woman named Kyoko, my first urge was congratulate her on her organizational brilliance and foresight. Kyoko has tracked each of her family’s movements on a pocket calendar from the day they left their home in Iwaki on March 12th to their first night in a Tokyo shelter on […]

One Hundred Million Eyes

Posted: 13th March 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized
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My heart is in my throat. We’ve all seen the same footage: black rolling water, splintered villages, floating fires, and the blank haunted stares of survivors. This is Japan. Right now. But last year in Haiti we saw similar buildings in similar heaps. We saw vast muddy waters move across Pakistan. We watched buildings disappear […]

Cut Military Not Aid

Posted: 27th February 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized
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I am not an expert on the economy or on balancing anything more substantial than my checkbook, but I do know that many of the programs slashed by House Republicans this week are not the cause of our financial woes. Groups specifically targeted include homeless veterans, low income women and children, those benefitting from mosquito […]

Birthright Citizenship Under Attack

Posted: 13th February 2011 by Erika Iverson in Uncategorized

The annual attack on the 14th Amendment and birthright citizenship is underway. Jus soli is the granting of citizenship to anyone born within a country regardless of the citizenship of the parent. Those seeking to eliminate birthright citizenship claim that a misinterpretation of the 14th Amendment has led to a plague of anchor babies. Each […]