Immigration Article of the Day: ‘[Take from Us Our] Wretched Refuse’: The Deportation of America’s Adoptees by DeLeith Duke Gossett
‘[Take from Us Our] Wretched Refuse’: The Deportation of America’s Adoptees by DeLeith Duke Gossett, Texas Tech University School of Law June 2, 2016 University of Cincinnati Law Review, Vol. 85, No. 1, 2017
The last twenty years, in particular, have seen an increase in immigration enforcement as the list of deportable offenses for non-citizens has expanded under federal immigration law. At the same time, restrictions on judicial review of removal actions have resulted in such harsh consequences that “[t]rial judges adjudicating criminal matters have been divested of a long-standing discretionary power to make recommendations against deportation of non-citizen defendants”.
Congress attempted to fix the problem by passing the Child Citizenship Act of 2000, which automatically granted U.S. citizenship to those adopted from abroad by American citizens. However, because of political compromise, the Act extended the protection of U.S. citizenship only to those under the age of 18. Congress tried to remedy the problem in 2013; the Senate approved a measure to fix the loophole, but it stalled in the House of Representatives, and U.S. citizenship again proved elusive for this group of adoptees. Meanwhile, an estimated 18,000 of these children, now adults, remain in a de facto stateless status and live “off the grid” in America, constitutionally unable to vote, serve on a jury, seek public office, obtain passports, or enjoy other privileges of U.S. citizenship.
Recently, the Adoptee Citizenship Act of 2015 was introduced to finally grant citizenship to all foreign-born children adopted by U.S. citizen parents, regardless of age. The Article ultimately calls on Congress to pass this needed legislation that would finally grant to all adoptees the U.S. citizenship that is long overdue, but also notes the considerable uphill battle the bill faces amid the current state of immigration law and partisan politics that reflect continuing nativist concerns.