Immigration

Author Biography
Matt Kelley Matt Kelley
Brooklyn, NY

Matt has worked and volunteered in various capacities in criminal justice reform for several years. When he's not blogging, he works as the Online Communications Manager at the Innocence Project. Views expressed here are Matt's, and don't represent the positions of the Innocence Project. Before the Innocence Project, Matt wrote and edited for several newspapers and magazines, worked on documentary films and managed an ecolodge in Ecuador. Matt is a graduate of the Medill School of Journalism at Northwestern University.

Posts by Matt Kelley

Private Prison as Stimulus

Published April 02, 2009 @ 05:00AM PT

[Change.org's Criminal Justice blogger Matt Kelley guest blogs here today about the consequences of privatization and proliferation of immigration detention.  Check out Matt's blog today for my guest post there about the DREAM Act. - DB]

Cities and towns from coast to coast are struggling to stay afloat in this recession and they're grasping for any new industry that will move to town  - including one that profits from locking up immigrants, private prisons. It's sad that the warehousing of immigrants is one of few stable industries in the United States today, but it'll stay that way as long a cycle of profit surrounds our immigration policy.

Local governments are tripping over one another to get a piece of the private prison pie. Two news stories this week - from Baldwin County, Georgia and Morton, Mississippi - make plain the unapologetic drive of municipal governments to become prison towns to create jobs and industry when manufacturing and other industries are dying and moving away. The destructive immigration policies that siphon thousands of people into these prisons are viewed as nothing more than fodder in an economic machine.

It doesn't have to be this way. Instead of locking up undocumented immigrants, we could focus on enabling hard-working people to pursue their dreams and stimulate the economy through work and innovation rather than through prison profits.

Today on the Criminal Justice blog, Dave Bennion writes about the promise of the DREAM Act, which - as you know - would allow undocumented immigrants to pursue legal status through college education or military service. Passage of the DREAM Act would be a big step in the right direction, for an America that should allow us to pursue our personal and professional goals. But until progressive reforms like this take root, we're dangling the American Dream before the eyes of millions, only to divert them to being warehoused in our private prisons, working and living for someone else's profit.

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