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Immigration Policy Principles for Food Sovereignty


Sign-On to Support USFSA Immigration Policy Priorities for Food Sovereignty

Preamble

The US Food Sovereignty Alliance (USFSA) stands for the rights of all people, including undocumented immigrant workers
and their families in the U.S. Farmworkers, food processing workers, food distribution workers, restaurant workers and other
retail food workers are all directly harmed by the marginalization and exploitation of all undocumented immigrants including
the vulnerability of women to economic, physical, and sexual abuse. Food sovereignty requires dignity and for all workers in
the food system; we affirm that this includes a process of legalization with dignity that guarantees all rights for all people.

Full dignity and empowerment for food system workers is impossible to achieve while neo-liberal free trade policies define
the relationship between our government and other nations. At the same time, the misguided mandate of militarizing the
Mexico-US borders and areas further south directly contradicts the internal logic of free trade as an idea. These
agreements force the migration of economically displaced people while militarization of borders and criminalization of cross-
border migration is designed to maintain a vulnerable and therefore cheap labor force. The movement of people migrating
toward employment out of desperation for economic survival is a symptom of a broad system of economic exploitation. That
system directly undermines food sovereignty and human dignity. We believe that the principles of food sovereignty
would be served by policies that honor the humanity of all workers, including the unconditional right to migrate as
enshrined in the International Declaration of Human Rights, the right to organize, and the right to defend and implement
economic policies that allow for people to prosper and stay in their home communities, including a democratic and sovereign
control of local agricultural and food markets and local agricultural policies.

The US Food Sovereignty Alliance calls for immigration policies that remain accountable to affected communities and that
uphold the rights and dignity of all, while contributing to a food system that values the lives and well-being of food system
workers and their families.

Sign-On to Support USFSA Immigration Policy Priorities for Food Sovereignty

USFSA Principles for Immigration Reform

1 END BORDER MILITARIZATION. The use of expensive and wasteful border militarization as a binding condition for a
legalization program is unacceptable and cruel. Such a condition, as proposed in the recently released Senate immigration
bill, would further concentrate power and further conflate criminalization processes with migration. Remove National Guard
troops from the border and end the privatization of border control and security operations on the border. Prosecute private
vigilante groups for violations of the rights of migrants, including assault against women. No more deaths. Redirect funds
from border enforcement towards social services, healthcare, education, family reunification, processing visa backlogs and
enforcing civil rights.

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2 SEPARATE ENFORCEMENT OF FEDERAL IMMIGRATION LAW FROM LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT. End Secure
Communities. Truly secure communities know that they can access law enforcement agents without fear of retaliation or
deportation. End local criminalization of immigration status-related violations such as driving without a license or unlawful
entry.

3 END TEMPORARY or GUEST WORKER PROGRAMS. If/while they continue to exist, grant all temporary workers
access to visas that create a pathway to citizenship for themselves and their families. Guarantee human rights, worker
protections, and fair wages to all workers, regardless of immigration status or country of origin. Allow workers to change
employers, the right to organize, and the right to travel. Deprivatize the foreign labor recruitment market to curb indentured
servitude. Ensure that employers have sufficient resources to pay promised wages and to comply with labor laws. We
oppose any attempt to impose a merit based program that assigns skill preferences that are both unrealistic and unjust.

4 END MANDATORY E-VERIFY PROGRAMS. They turn employers into immigration law enforcers, and too often, are
used as a tool to prohibit workers from organizing or speaking up about workplace rights violations including assault on
women. These employer screenings violate the privacy and basic human rights of all workers. Such programs put an undue
burden on workers and employers, and risk creating an I.D. that signals and imposes a second class status for the worker.

5 REPEAL UNJUST TRADE AGREEMENTS. Evaluate and repeal existing trade agreements that displace people, force
migration, and impede food sovereignty. Dont create new trade agreements that displace people or lower living standards.
Prohibit military enforcement of trade agreements.

6 PROVIDE A FAIR PATHWAY TO LEGALIZATION AND/OR CITIZENSHIP: Allow affordable and straightforward
access to pathways for all, regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation, economic status, or employment status. Allow equal
protections and rights for all, including right to work, right to organize, right to travel, right to benefits, and right to due
process during the legalization process.

7 KEEP FAMILIES TOGETHER Reunite families that have been separated by deportation. Process the backlog of
pending visas & increase family-based visas. Recognize same-sex partnership and sibling relationships under the family visa
program. Eliminate high income requirements for sponsorship to keep families together.

8 END ARBITRARY DETENTION: Guarantee due process and a fair day in court to all. Close detention centers.

9 INSTATE A MORATORIUM ON DEPORTATIONS and allow right-to-return for all deported over the last 4 years.

10 PROVIDE SANCTUARY for refugees and victims of crime, domestic abuse, and sexual assault.

11 REMAIN ACCOUNTABLE AND TRANSPARENT. Engage affected communities in decision-making around immigration
policy. Ensure that the laws protect all peoples rights. Ensure transparency and accountability between agencies enforcing
laws, policymakers, and affected people.

12 GUARANTEE THE FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS FOR ALL. In the workplace and beyond. No criminalization that
compromises rights. Guarantee rights regardless of race, gender, economic status, immigration status, sexual orientation,
including the right to organize and self-advocate without fear of retaliation or deportation.

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6 THOUGHTS ON IMMIGRATION POLICY PRINCIPLES FOR FOOD


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