American Immigration from Mariel to Miller

The Refugee Act of 1980 feels like a huge success...for a short amount of time. The first test of the act comes when Fidel Castro opens Cuba's borders (and Cuba's prisons) and hundreds of refugees arrive on Florida shores. The Mariel Boatlift Crisis forced the U.S. government to realize that not all asylum processing can happen abroad. Unfortunately, it also left the public with the impression that "Open arms and open hearts" leads only to crisis. 

What is American Immigration from Mariel to Miller?

Judge (Ret.) Paul Wickham Schmidt & Podcaster Marica Sharashenidze, with an “up close and personal look” at American’s most misunderstood issue.

For nearly five decades, retired Judge Paul Wickham Schmidt has been involved in the development and application of American immigration law. From the staff of the Board of Immigration Appeals (“BIA”) at the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”), to the General Counsel’s Office of the “Legacy” Immigration & Naturalization Service (“INS”), where he was the Deputy General Counsel and Acting General Counsel, to partnerships at two of America’s most distinguished law firms, Jones Day, then Fragomen, to appointment as Chairman and an Appellate Judge at the BIA, followed by 13-years on the trial bench at the U.S. Immigration Court in Arlington, VA, the “retail level of American immigration,” until his retirement in 2016, Judge Schmidt has “seen it all” and lived much of it. Since “retiring,” he has been an Adjunct Professor of Law at Georgetown Law, a proud member of the Round Table of Former Immigration Judges (amici in more than 50 cases seeking to uphold due process in Immigration Court), the author of the blog immigrationcourtside.com, and an oft-quoted commentator on, and outspoken critic of, current developments in immigration law, due process, and human rights.

In this timely, hard-hitting, highly personal seven-episode series, podcaster Marica Sharashenidze interviews Judge Schmidt about six events that shaped American immigration and his life in the law: From the Mariel Boatlift and the Refugee Act of 1980, to the fundamental changes made by the Immigration Reform & Control Act of 1986 (“IRCA”), the development of the BIA in the 1990s, the infamous “Ashcroft Purge,” all the way up to the Trump Administration’s all-out assault on due process in our Immigration Courts, and ending with a more recent look at what the future might hold for both immigrants and America’s role as a nation that welcomes and depends on them.

Get some unique historical context and learn how the re-emergence and “normalization” of racism, xenophobia, false narratives, unbridled nationalism, and de-humanization of “the other” in our national immigration and refugee policies and dialogue presents an existential threat to the rights and future of every American.

Cover photo by Alice Wycklendt from https://freeimages.com/"