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13 - Immigration law enforcement after 9/11 and human rights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 February 2011

Alice Edwards
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
Carla Ferstman
Affiliation:
The Redress Trust, London
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Summary

Introduction

In January 2002, the US Department of Justice announced the so-called Absconder Apprehension Initiative (AAI). The AAI is a programme designed to locate, arrest and deport those the US Government describes as ‘absconders’: that is, foreign nationals who have been ordered to be deported but have failed to leave the United States. Over 300,000 such persons were thought to be in the United States at that time. However, these ‘absconders’ were not to be pursued equally under the AAI. Rather, the US authorities declared that, in order to assist the campaign against terrorism, they would focus on the enforcement of deportation orders against approximately 6,000 ‘priority absconders’ who ‘come from countries in which there has been Al Qaeda terrorist presence or activity’. Although the government never explicitly identified these countries, those treated as ‘priority absconders’ came from a list of states all of which – except for the Philippines – have predominantly Arab and/or Muslim populations.

As I will demonstrate, the AAI is just one in a series of immigration enforcement initiatives adopted in recent years by Western states in the name of preventing terrorism. Typically, these initiatives target particular groups of foreign nationals based on their country of origin or nationality. The purpose of this chapter is to examine the impacts that these immigration measures have on human rights, in particular the right to non-discrimination.

Type
Chapter
Information
Human Security and Non-Citizens
Law, Policy and International Affairs
, pp. 459 - 494
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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