The Rhizome Center for Migrants
    USC Event
    October 24, 2022  |  By RCM Admin  |  En News, Press Release

    Co-Deported U.S. Citizen Minors in Mexico are Greeted by Staff of the American Services Unit and Received Important Information on Higher Learning Opportunities

    [Guadalajara, Jal. October 24, 2022] The Rhizome Center for Migrants is a U.S. nonprofit based in Guadalajara, Mexico, where we serve the needs of people impacted by return or deportation. Through intervention, we transform the lives of Mexican migrants and their families to build a better North America for everyone. Among those we serve here in […]

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    Abi Edited
    September 21, 2022  |  By RCM Admin  |  En News, Press Release

    The Rhizome Center Announces New Board Member

    [Guadalajara, Jal. September 21, 2022] The Rhizome Center for Migrants (www.rhizomecenter.org) is thrilled to announce Abigail Thornton’s addition as the newest member of our board. Abigail “Abi” is an expert on migration, education, and community development with extensive field experience along the U.S.-Mexico border. From 2015-2020, Abi conducted ethnographic research at Casa del Migrante Tijuana’s […]

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    Deported Americans
    August 4, 2022  |  By RCM Admin  |  En News, Press Release

    U.S. Citizens in Mexico: Displaced Without Protection

    [Guadalajara, Jal. August 4, 2022] More than 4 million Mexican migrants have been deported from the United States since 2008. During the same period, a significant number of Mexican migrants returned, forcibly or voluntarily, to Mexico as a result of family obligations, unfavorable economic and labor market conditions in the United States, and stricter enforcement […]

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    Jess Announcement
    September 1, 2021  |  By RCM Admin  |  En News, Press Release

    The Rhizome Center Announces New Board Member

    [Guadalajara, Jal. September 1, 2021] The Rhizome Center for Migrants (www.rhizomecenter.org) is thrilled to announce Jessica Billedo’s addition as the newest member of our board. A native of Chicago, where many overseas Jaliscienses live, Jessica is the Director of Mexico Operations for Coyote Logistics here in Guadalajara and has volunteered with us since 2018. We’re […]

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    Veterans Workshop
    August 16, 2021  |  By RCM Admin  |  En Press Release

    Deported Veterans in the Interior of Mexico Receive Legal Aid, Many for the First Time

    [Guadalajara, Jal. August 15, 2021] In early July, the Biden Administration announced it is formalizing a new process to allow deported veterans to return to the country legally. In anticipation of the President’s new initiative, The Rhizome Center for Migrants hosted a citizenship and benefits workshop this Sunday, in collaboration with Public Counsel, Immigrant Defenders Law […]

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    Kamala Harris
    June 7, 2021  |  By RCM Admin  |  En Press Release

    The Rhizome Center for Migrants Joins Mexican Civil Society in Letter to Vice President Kamala Harris

    [Guadalajara, Jal. June 7, 2021] Today, Mexican civil society organizations sent a letter to Vice President Kamala Harris during her trip to Mexico underscoring, among other things, the need for immigration reform that provides a solution for the growing number of people in Mexico—now millions—who remain separated from their families, exiled from their country, or […]

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    HRC (1)
    January 11, 2021  |  By RCM Admin  |  En Press Release

    The Rhizome Center for Migrants Announces New Mexico Advocacy Fellow

    [Guadalajara, Jal. January 11, 2021] The Rhizome Center for Migrants (www.rhizomecenter.org) is excited to announce our newest team member, César Miguel Rivera Vega Magallón. César joins the organization as our Mexico Advocacy Fellow. As a formerly undocumented immigrant rights advocate in California, he worked on various campaigns, including #Not1More, the implementation of drivers licenses for […]

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    Adoptee With American Mom
    November 16, 2020  |  By RCM Admin  |  En Press Release

    End the Deportation of Foreign Adopted Children of American Parents

    [Guadalajara, Jal. November 16, 2020] There are currently an estimated 35,000 to 75,000 intercountry adoptees who do not have U. S. citizenship.  The Child Citizenship Act of 2000 made it possible for many foreign-born children to gain automatic citizenship. However, it did not cover adoptees who were 18 or older at that time and already […]

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    Irwin County Detention Center
    September 30, 2020  |  By RCM Admin  |  En Press Release

    Stop CBP From Destroying Its Own Records

    [Guadalajara, Jal. September 30, 2020] This week, The Rhizome Center for Migrants joined over 100 organizations in requesting that the National Archives and Records Administration reconsider its recent approval of CBP’s request to destroy internal records of misconduct.  The Rhizome Center for Migrants interviews Mexican nationals deported through the Interior Repatriation Initiative (IRI) program to […]

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    Immigrants
    August 18, 2020  |  By RCM Admin  |  En Press Release

    Over 170 Organizations Offer Blueprint to Undo Damage Wrought by Trump, Transform America’s Immigration System

    [Guadalajara, Jal. August 18, 2020] Today The Rhizome Center for Migrants joined over 170 U.S. leading immigration and advocacy organizations in releasing the 2021 Immigration Action Plan, laying out a blueprint for the next administration to restore human dignity to a system weaponized by the Trump administration, reinforce core American values, and power the economic […]

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    Updates



    The Rhizome Center for Migrants

    The Rhizome Center for Migrants

    Mexico has now received over 18,000 non-Mexicans deported from the United States, including disabled persons, older persons, and those with severe or chronic health conditions.Deported Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans transferred to Mexico now find themselves in Southern Mexico, undocumented and far from their families, homes, and communities. For many, asylum is the only durable option for regularizing status.Anyone who finds themselves—or who has a deported family member stranded in Mexico—should have the names of institutions and organizations providing legal orientation and aid on the asylum process in Mexico. Here are seven free immigration law resources in Villahermosa, Cancun, and Tapachula, where the majority transferred to Mexico currently reside.

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    The Rhizome Center for Migrants
    is in Guadalajara Jalisco.
    The Rhizome Center for Migrants

    Yesterday's SCOTUS decisions mean that people seeking protection at U.S. borders will be turned away, while 1.3+ million people with temporary or other protected status could lose those protections—placing them at risk of deportation.Across the Ameri#Deportationation has become a major driver of displacement, uprooting people from communities where they have lived for decades, built families, and put down deep roots. If the administration carries out its stated goal of 1 million deportations a year, the resulting displacement would rival some of the largest displacement crises in the Americas in recent decades.‼️ While Mexicans have long been the largest nationality deported from the United Sta#mexicoexico as a country has been complacent to U.S. pressures to become the primary deportation destination for 3rd country nationals. Today some 17,000+ Cubans, Haitians, Nicaraguans, and Venezuelans have been sent to Mexico and remain stranded in the South of Mexico with limited legal protections and few resources. As needs grow, migrant-serving organizations across Mexico struggle to address the current crisis amid severe funding cuts. ✊Please consider supporting The Rhizome Center for Migrants' work via Zelle to connect@rhizomecenter.org (we get 100%) or via givebutter.com/rhizomecenter. Your donation helps ensure that justice does not end at the border, and people arriving in Mexico today do not have to face deportation alone.

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    The Rhizome Center for Migrants

    The Rhizome Center for Migrants

    What is the #SoyMéxico program, and why isn’t it year-round in #Jalisco?The Soy México program allows children born in the U.S. to Mexican parents to locally register their birth and receive a CURP by simplifying bureaucratic barriers and, in some cases, reducing reliance on apostilles in practice. These documents enable access to school, healthcare, and other basic rights in Mexico by providing proof of identity and recognition of Mexican nationality. In Jalisco, the program will open this year from Aug-Oct. At The Rhizome Center for Migrants, we see how these barriers have relegated children to the margins of society. The most vulnerable children have not been able to obtain any ID for years, and were never able to integrate into the Mexican public school system. 👉 Our report on U.S. Citizens in Mexico: Displaced Without Protection –> tinyurl.com/mry4ayvj‼️We urgently call on the State of Jalisco to fully implement the 2024 federal reform eliminating apostille requirements for these registrations, or adopt a year-round, accessible model like states such as Morelos—so that every child can be recognized in Mexico.If you need help obtaining U.S. birth records, the apostille, or require a correction to vital documents, 📞 us on WhatsApp at: +52 33 2182 0836.

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    About

    The Rhizome Center for Migrants is an independent, secular 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Our Mexico Project, based in Guadalajara, Jalisco, supports deported and returned migrants through legal aid and reintegration services.

     

    ABOUT US

    The Rhizome Center for Migrants is an independent, secular 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization. Our Mexico Project, based in Guadalajara, Jalisco, supports deported and returned migrants through legal aid and reintegration services.

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