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Deferred​ Action for Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents (DAPA) and DACA Program expanded

2014 - 2017

This executive order issued by the Obama White House sought to defer deportation and some other protections for unauthorized immigrants whose children were either American citizens or lawful permanent residents.

Resources

From the Migration Policy Institute: Statistics of the DAPA eligible population

Infographic
USCIS Resources

Discussion Questions

What group of immigrants was targeted to receive the benefits of DAPA?

Why was the program never implemented?

How might having a parent or parents without legal status affect a young person?

Summary

Following the DACA program, which sought to defer deportation and some protective measures to persons who had arrived as children without legal standing, the Obama Administration announced the DAPA program in November 2014 to also extend deferred action status, i.e. protection from deportation, to unauthorized immigrants who had lived in the United States continuously since January 2010 and whose children were either American citizens or lawful permanent residents. The program did not confer permanent status but provided some measure of security until legal reforms could be enacted. Like DACA, the program was a presidential executive action because immigration reforms had long been stalemated in Congress. DAPA was immediately challenged in court and never enacted and was formally rescinded by the Trump Administration in June 2017.

Source

From the USCIS website: https://www.uscis.gov/archive/2014-executive-actions-immigration

Primary Sidebar

  • Background
  • Timeline
  • Lesson Plans
    • Overview of Major Laws
    • Asian Immigration
    • Citizenship
    • Labor and Economic Priorities
    • European Immigration
    • Family and Chain Migration
    • Gender and Immigration
    • Immigration Laws and Enforcement
    • Immigration and International Relations
    • Immigration Stations
    • Migrations within the Americas
    • Refugees / Asylum
    • Standards
  • Additional Resources
  • Glossary

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A project of the Immigration and Ethnic History Society

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