In April 2012, we retrieved 27,500 articles from 1,260 sources.
We now store 887,110 articles. (Details)
Editor's Note: This is the second installment of a three-part series on migrant rights by journalist and immigration activist David Bacon. This article is taken from the report 'Displaced, Unequal and Criminalized - Fighting for the Rights of Migrants in the United States' that examines the origins of the current migratory labor phenomenon, the mechanisms that maintain it, and proposals for a more equitable system.
CIP Americas: 'Over the last 25 years, guest worker programs have increasingly become a vehicle for channeling the migration that has stemmed from free market reforms. Increasing numbers of guest workers are recruited each year for labor in the U.S. from Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean under the H1-B, H2-A and H2-B programs. Recruiters promise high wages and charge thousands of dollars for visas, fees and transportation. By the time they leave home, the debts of guest workers are crushing.' read more
Latest articles
- Fugitive penguin 337 spotted alive in Tokyo Bay
- Help Animals Recurring
- Tunisian authorities must investigate new torture allegations
- Bogota bomb attack 'reprehensible'
- Accountability for violations needed despite Palestinian prisoner deal
- Bahrain must commit to accountability at Universal Periodic Review
- US Surgeon General Stages 'Walk to Wellness'
- US Surgeon General Stages 'Walk to Wellness'
- Walmart to Install Solar On 27 Stores in Mass.
- Taking A Look at Publicly Traded Solar Companies




