Deportation Process
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A Deportation Process is a legal process that is a government enforcement process to forcibly remove non-citizens from a country through removal proceedings.
- AKA: Removal Process, Forced Removal Process, Immigration Removal Process, Expulsion Process.
- Context:
- It can typically involve Deportation Orders issued by immigration judges or immigration authoritys.
- It can typically require Deportation Grounds such as immigration violations or criminal convictions.
- It can typically include Deportation Hearings where deportation defenses are presented.
- It can typically result in Deportation Execution through deportation transportation.
- It can typically trigger Deportation Bars preventing legal reentry for specified time periods.
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- It can often bypass Deportation Due Process through expedited removal procedures.
- It can often target Deportation Priority Groups based on enforcement prioritys.
- It can often involve Deportation Detention in immigration detention facilitys.
- It can often face Deportation Legal Challenges through immigration appeals.
- ...
- It can range from being a Voluntary Deportation Process to being a Forced Deportation Process, depending on its deportation compliance level.
- It can range from being an Administrative Deportation Process to being a Judicial Deportation Process, depending on its deportation procedural type.
- It can range from being an Individual Deportation Process to being a Mass Deportation Process, depending on its deportation scale.
- It can range from being a Standard Deportation Process to being an Expedited Deportation Process, depending on its deportation timeline.
- It can range from being a Criminal Deportation Process to being a Civil Deportation Process, depending on its deportation legal basis.
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- It can be initiated by Immigration Enforcement Agencys through deportation proceeding initiation.
- It can be challenged through Immigration Court Systems via deportation defense attorneys.
- It can be influenced by Immigration Policy Changes affecting deportation prioritys.
- It can be documented in Deportation Record Systems for deportation tracking.
- It can be complicated by Diplomatic Relations with deportation destination countrys.
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- Example(s):
- Historical Deportation Processes, such as:
- Mexican Repatriation Process (1929-1936) deporting over 1 million mexican nationals and mexican americans.
- Operation Wetback Process (1954) deporting approximately 1.3 million mexican immigrants.
- Palmer Raids Deportation Process (1919-1920) targeting radical immigrants.
- Modern U.S. Deportation Processes, such as:
- Title 42 Deportation Process (2020-2023) using public health authority for rapid expulsions.
- MPP Deportation Process (2019-present) implementing remain in mexico policy.
- PACR/HARP Deportation Process (2019-present) conducting asylum screenings at border facilitys.
- Expedited Removal Processes, such as:
- Country-Specific Deportation Processes, such as:
- ...
- Historical Deportation Processes, such as:
- Counter-Example(s):
- Voluntary Departure Process, which allows self-removal without formal deportation order.
- Immigration Relief Process, which grants legal status rather than removal.
- Asylum Process, which provides protection rather than deportation.
- Naturalization Process, which confers citizenship rather than removal.
- Border Denial Process, which prevents entry rather than removes after entry.
- See: Legal Process, Government Enforcement Process, Immigration Law, Due Process Right, Human Rights Law, Administrative Law, Immigration Court, ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement), Expedited Removal, Mass Deportation, Forced Migration, Refugee Law.