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agosto 4, 2022  |  Por Admón. del CRM En Noticias, Comunicados de prensa

U.S. Citizens in Mexico: Displaced Without Protection

Deported Americans
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[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 of U.S. immigration policy and laws. The exodus of Mexican migrants from the United States has entailed an equally significant departure of U.S. citizen spouses and children to Mexico. This has contributed to an extraordinary growth of the U.S.-citizen population in Mexico, with Mexico now outpacing Canada and the European Union as the home of the largest U.S. population outside of the United States. While no official count exists of the number of U.S. citizens leaving the United States due to deportation or return migration, the U.S. State Department estimates that 1.6 million Americans now live in Mexico. Based on Mexican school records, more than 550,000 of these are the U.S.-born children of Mexican migrants. Though the State Department recognizes the vulnerability of young U.S. citizens in Mexico, there have not yet been significant or consistent efforts to identify affected U.S. citizens, through either official counting or citizen services outreach. Such efforts can no longer be delayed since, based on interviews with displaced U.S. citizens in Mexico, a vast majority of them intend to return to the United States one day.

The need for a census and assessment of needs is key, given that citizens who emigrate with their Mexican family members often experience persistent disadvantages in Mexico, including the inability to access U.S. or Mexican documentation, limited or no access to health services and preventative health care, job disintegration, restricted mobility, and reduced educational attainment. Moreover, the loss of language, identity, culture, and community further contribute to future social vulnerability if these individuals later decide to reenter U.S. society. Given the serious and simultaneous barriers and vulnerabilities U.S. citizens face in Mexico, this report maintains that, without improved consular services and a diaspora policy that anticipates the likely return of these Americans, the United States risks re-inheriting a U.S. population now the size of Delaware, which may well require critical government services to reintegrate after a prolonged period abroad.

To access our full report commissioned by the Baker Institute of Public Policy at Rice University’s Center for the United States and Mexico, visit:
http://www.bakerinstitute.org/research/us-citizens-in-mexico-displaced-without-protection.

Acerca del Instituto Baker
The Baker Institute Center for the United States and Mexico seeks to have a meaningful impact on the U.S.-Mexico relationship through original research, relevant solutions to binational policy issues, and the advancement of mutual understanding by convening leaders who can bridge the world of ideas and the world of action

co-deportation de facto deported deportación unión familiar migración México migración repatriación migrantes repatriados U.S. citizens frontera entre México y EE. UU.
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Notificaciones



El Centro Rizoma del Migrante

The Rhizome Center for Migrants

Gathering is resistance.We will be in Mexicali next week in solidarity with system-impacted scholars and activists who are models themselves for a new pipeline: prison-to-deportation-to-higher education. Working across borders, universities, and governments, a small group of activists highlight the incredible effort it takes to turn one's deportation into a stepping stone for lifetime improvement and education. This conference is about pushing for carceral educational opportunities, removing institutional barriers for continuing education, and making room for role models from marginalized communities to stand up and say, "I proved it can be done—you can too."@theundergroundscholars @incarcerationnations @uabc_oficial

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El Centro Rizoma del Migrante

The Rhizome Center for Migrants

Registration is open! This August 7-12, 2026, The Rhizome Center for Migrants will host its 14th Immigration Program in Guadalajara, Mexico. This program is meant for U.S.-based donors, advocates, immigration attorneys, academics, and law students.Our 6-day program humanizes the experiences of those returned, deported, co-deported, and transferred to Mexico, as well as those seeking international protection after the closure of the border. Our program helps advocates to expand their networks, unpack what regional enforcement dynamics mean for those deported in a Trump/Sheinbaum era, spot cross border issues, and learn how to holistically support mixed-status families affected by deportation.Since 2019, The Rhizome Center for Migrants has hosted more than 80 U.S.-based advocates. See which one of your peers has already joined us: tinyurl.com/ys28a33k. Program details: tinyurl.com/d8vbm8bh. Questions and inquiries should be directed to: immersion@rhizomecenter.org.Register by June 15th: lnkd.in/eHvPuBMT

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El Centro Rizoma del Migrante

The Rhizome Center for Migrants

According to Human Rights First, more than 17,400 people have been forcibly transferred to third countries where they have zero ties. Many face violence, arbitrary detention, chain refoulement, have no access to attorneys, and are permanently separated from their families. While Mexico denies being a third country for removal, Mexico has accepted more than 85% of all U.S. third country deportations in 2025-2026.Notwithstanding the arrival of Haitians today due to deportation, the mass migration of Haitians to Mexico occurred during the 2010s and 2020s due to a series of events, including the 2010 earthquake, cholera outbreak, changing economic and social conditions in Brazil and Chile—where many Haitians had fled—economic collapse due to COVID, gang violence, and the inability to seek asylum in the U.S. Today, well over 100,000 Haitians now live in Mexico, with the largest concentrations in Tijuana and Tapachula.As the U.S. ramps up deportations of lawful permanent residents with strong ties to the U.S., Haitians like Jean find themselves in an insufferable situation, held against his will in Southern Mexico without the ability to integrate legally, prove who he is, request a work permit, or leave Mexico. Most deported Haitians don't speak Spanish and lack language skills to navigate the Mexican asylum system, or have a meaningful relationship with their attorneys, if they can find or afford one.📞 UNHCR (Wsp +52 55 7005 5950) or download the El Jaguar app from Google Play or Apple App Store for info about the MX asylum process📲 Rhizome Center (Wsp +52 33 2182 0836) for integration support referrals and info🇭🇹 Haitian Consulate Tapachula (Tel +52 96 2642 8022 or cons.h.tap@gmail.com) for info about how to obtain proof of nationali#Deportationa#USMexicoe#Tabascob#QuintanaRoon#Chiapasiapas

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El Centro Rizoma del Migrante es una organización sin fines de lucro independiente y secular 501(c)(3). Nuestro Proyecto México, situado en Guadalajara, Jalisco, apoya a los migrantes deportados y repatriados mediante asesoría legal y servicios de reintegración.

 

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El Centro Rizoma del Migrante es una organización sin fines de lucro independiente y secular 501(c)(3). Nuestro Proyecto México, situado en Guadalajara, Jalisco, apoya a los migrantes deportados y repatriados mediante asesoría legal y servicios de reintegración.

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