Classroom Resource: Talking and Teaching about the Fall 2018 Migrant Caravan
The purpose of this collection is to encourage educators to explore the migrant caravan and the questions that it raises about migration, law, and ethics through the lens of current events and civic education. Migration is one of the most important civic issues of our time, we believe that it is essential that civic education provides an opportunity for reflective conversation about the civic challenges of the day.
This resource was originally posted on October 24, 2018. It was updated on November 26, 2018. We will continue to update it as the story unfolds.
Introduction:
At the end of October 2018, a caravan with over 7,000 participants is making its way from Central America towards the United States. This is the second major caravan that has caught both the President’s and the Press’s attention this year. Experts on Latin American migration note that people often travel in caravans for safety because the route north can be dangerous. Groups traveling in large numbers are less vulnerable to smugglers, violence, and harassment. According to press reports, about 50 percent of those on the caravan are young men, in other cases, whole families with children as young as three months are traveling together. Several reports have noted that the caravan includes LGBTQ participants fleeing persecution in their home community.
The migrant caravan that is making its way from Central America, through Mexico has become a focus of President Trump’s attention and policy suggestions. He has suggested closing the entire Southwest border. On Twitter, the President wrote, “Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador were not able to do the job of stopping people from leaving their country and coming illegally to the U.S. We will now begin cutting off, or substantially reducing, the massive foreign aid routinely given to them.” Among the claims that the President has made is that “criminals and unknown Middle Easterners are mixed in” the people seeking asylum or to make their way to the United States. CNN’s Jim Acosta pressed the President for proof, Trump acknowledged that “There’s no proof of anything but,” he then added, “they could very well be.”
Thousands of migrants arrived in Tijuana in November 2018. Some residents protested their arrival, while others worked to provide for the needs of the migrants, including food and medicine. On November 8, the U.S. announced tighter restrictions for those seeking asylum, however, a federal court blocked their implementation on November 19. On the weekend following Thanksgiving, some migrants led a protest to highlight the challenges they faced in seeking asylum. A few dozen migrants sought to make their way into the United States, storming their way to the border. In response, U.S. border agents fired tear gas. AP reporter Chris Sherman tweeted, “US Border Patrol has just launched tear gas into Mexico. Breeze carrying it hundreds of yards. Parents running away with choking toddlers.” Images of the scene soon went viral, prompting polarized responses.
While President Trump views the migrant caravan through the lens of security and politics, others see a human rights story. At least three different articles in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights are directly related to migration. The text of those articles can be found below:
Article 13.
(1) Everyone has the right to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each state.
(2) Everyone has the right to leave any country, including his own, and to return to his country.Article 14.
(1) Everyone has the right to seek and to enjoy in other countries asylum from persecution.
(2) This right may not be invoked in the case of prosecutions genuinely arising from non-political crimes or from acts contrary to the purposes and principles of the United Nations.Article 15.
(1) Everyone has the right to a nationality.
(2) No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of his nationality nor denied the right to change his nationality.
Below are a series of recent reports about the migrant caravan that you might use to start a conversation about why people migrate and the legal, moral and ethical questions that are raised by the Caravan and the way people are responding to it. Consider using these questions to frame your discussion:
- Why do people leave their homes?
- What do migrants experience on their journey? Why would people travel in a large caravan?
- Why do borders exist? What is the purpose of laws regulating migration?
- Who is responsible for people fleeing their homes?
- How do you explain the controversy surrounding the migrant caravan?
Some students might find it useful to review language before engaging with the collection. People often use the words immigrant, immigration, migrant, migration and refugee without knowing the distinctions between them. Below are definitions with a little commentary.
Migration: To move from one country, place, or locality to another. Currently, for example, there are over 250 million people living in countries outside of where they were born. Further, millions migrate within their own borders every year.
Migrant: Simply put, a migrant is someone who has moved from their birthplace. According to the United Nations a migrant is “any person who lives temporarily or permanently in a country where he or she was not born, and has acquired some significant social ties” to this new place. Some migrants move by choice (see immigrants below).
Others have been forced to move by events that were beyond their control (see refugees below); another example is of forced migration is the involuntary migration of African slaves to the New world. Some migrants move across national borders and some move within national borders (like the Dust Bowl Migrants from Arkansas to California or the Great African American Migration from the South to North). Still others take annual cyclical patterns (like for seasonal farm work).
Immigrant: An immigrant is someone who moves to a new country with the intent live permanently. It is often implied that immigrants had some degree of choice in their (or their families) decision to move. Some immigrants are granted official Federal recognition (a variety of temporary visas; permanent residency; or citizenship) while many are in limbo or may not be granted official recognition leading to undocumented status. Within the same family, some members may be citizens and others may not.
Refugee: A refugee is someone who is forced to move to a new place (either within their own borders or to a new country) to escape danger or persecution. An increasing number of refugees are being forced to flee because of environmental disasters. In 1951, the United Nations created a convention that legally defined the word refugee and subsequent U.N. conventions elaborated on the responsibility of the international community toward refugees. Refugees may seek asylum; as they await official Federal or national recognition they are considered temporary asylum seekers.
Many people see the story of the caravans in relationship to the challenge of undocumented immigration. Despite concerns, the Los Angeles Times reports that “illegal immigration has been at historic lows the last several years.” Cindy Carcamo explains:
In a thoughtful overview of the changing story of migration as Southwestern border, the Washington Post reports, “The border is tougher to cross than ever.But there’s still one way into America.
Asylum claims are soaring.” Follow the link to learn more.
Resources
Why do people leave their homes? What do migrants experience on their journey? Why would people travel in a large caravan?:
From PBS News Hour, October 23, 2018
Here’s what happens when migrant caravan arrives at U.S. border, SF Chronicle, Oct. 22, 2018, https://www.sfchronicle.com/politics/article/Here-s-what-happens-when-migrant-caravan-13327887.php
The Growing Migrant Caravan on Way to US Border, Explained, NBC Los Angeles, Oct. 22, 2018, https://www.nbclosangeles.com/news/national-international/What-Is-the-Migrant-Caravan-US-Border-Central-America-498275931.html
The Migrant Caravan and the Midterms, New York Times, Oct. 24, 2018
Why do borders exist? What is the purpose of laws regulating migration?
“THE TRUTH, IT’S EVEN WORSE IN HONDURAS.” MIGRANT CARAVAN FACES MISERY AT MEXICAN BORDER, Vice News, Oct. 21, 2018, https://news.vice.com/en_us/article/wj99x9/the-truth-its-even-worse-in-honduras-migrant-caravan-faces-misery-at-mexican-border
US agents fire tear gas as some migrants try to breach fence, November 25, 2018, ABC News via AP
A migrant family flees after U.S. authorities fire tear gas into Mexico to repel Central American migrants approaching the border: https://t.co/lP4Tt4Jf7B | 📷 Kim Kyung-Hoon pic.twitter.com/iMckHzJPpY
— Reuters Pictures (@reuterspictures) November 26, 2018
‘These children are barefoot. In diapers. Choking on tear gas.’, November 26, 2018, Washington Post
Who is responsible for people on the move?
Trump vows to send as many troops ‘as necessary’ to keep growing migrant caravan out, Oct. 22, 2018, https://www.foxnews.com/politics/trump-vows-to-send-as-many-troops-as-necessary-to-keep-growing-migrant-caravan-out
US closes San Ysidro crossing as migrants rush border, November 25, 2018, CNN
Embed from Getty Images
Classroom Activities:
Below is a set of classroom activities and thinking routines that can be used to deepen the discussion around the resources presented above.
- Use a K-W-L chart to have students consider what they know about the caravan and how they know it before introducing a set of news reports. Ask students how they know what they know and where they get their news, http://www.nea.org/tools/k-w-l-know-want-to-know-learned.html
- Have students create iceberg diagrams to explore what ideas and issues are below the surface when we talk about the migrant caravans, https://www.facinghistory.org/resource-library/teaching-strategies/iceberg-diagrams
- Use the circle of viewpoints thinking routine from Project Zero to explore different perspectives in the news reports, http://www.pz.harvard.edu/resources/circle-of-viewpoints
- Introduce the I Used to Think but Now I Think thinking routine to have students record how their thinking has changed as they learned more about the issue, http://www.pz.harvard.edu/resources/i-used-to-think-but-now-i-think
- To wrap up, encourage students to reflect on the political and media attention surrounding the caravan. You might ask them, “How do you explain the range of responses to surrounding the migrant caravan?”
- New York Times Learning has created this lesson to explore the story of the Migrant Caravans, https://www.nytimes.com/2018/10/23/learning/learning-with-migrant-caravan-continues-north-defying-mexico-and-us.html