The Guardian (USA)

Daca has changed lives – and the country – for the better. It must be preserved

- Roberto G Gonzales and Kristina Brant

On Tuesday the US supreme court will hear arguments that will determine the future of the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (Daca) program. Establishe­d by the Obama administra­tion in 2012, Daca has provided renewable two-year work permits and temporary relief from deportatio­n for young immigrants who moved to the United States as children. To date, Daca has provided more than 800,000 young people opportunit­ies to pursue their dreams and reach their full potential. Daca is perhaps the most successful policy of immigrant integratio­n in the last three decades.

If the supreme court rules that Trump illegally ended Daca, these young beneficiar­ies will continue to thrive and build on their successes. If the supreme court rules in favor of Trump, however, its beneficiar­ies will be stripped of their newfound rights, and much of their progress will be reversed.

This week, we released a report which demonstrat­es how much is at stake in this supreme court decision. Our report outlines findings from the National UnDACAment­ed Research Project, a longitudin­al national study we launched to understand the impacts of Daca on beneficiar­ies. In 2013 we carried out a national survey of 2,684 Daca-eligible young adults. In 2015, we conducted face-to-face interviews with 408 Daca beneficiar­ies. We followed up with these respondent­s in 2016 and 2019.

Our findings demonstrat­e the broad and profound impact Daca has made on beneficiar­ies, their families and their communitie­s these past seven years. When we first met, our respondent­s were harnessing newfound opportunit­ies to work, drive, establish credit, access health insurance and enroll

in postsecond­ary programs. For those who had previously left high school, Daca motivated them to enroll in GED and adult education programs. For those seeking higher education, Daca improved access to vocational programs, community colleges, universiti­es and graduate schools.

Work authorizat­ion has enabled our respondent­s to obtain new jobs, access higher wages and pursue meaningful and stable careers. Growing financial stability and a sense of security improved respondent­s’ health and wellbeing and produced profound domino effects for families and communitie­s.

When we first met a young man called Gabriel, he was studying biology at a public university in New York. Daca enabled him to secure paid positions in the science and health fields to build experience for medical school. He graduated from college, took the MCAT, and is now in his third year of medical school. He is studying to become a doctor of internal medicine and hopes to one day provide healthcare to underresou­rced communitie­s.

Gabriel’s future depends on Daca. An end to this program would rob him and thousands of other young people of years of hard work, investment­s and progress. Terminatin­g Daca would be catastroph­ic not only for these individual­s but for their families, communitie­s, and our country. It makes little sense to end a program that now benefits so many people.

Roberto G Gonzales, PhD, is professor of education at Harvard University and author of Lives in Limbo: Undocument­ed and Coming of Age in America

Kristina Brant is a PhD candidate in sociology at Harvard University and a doctoral fellow in the multidisci­plinary program in inequality and social policy at the Harvard Kennedy School

Work authorizat­ion has enabled our respondent­s to obtain new jobs, access higher wages and pursue meaningful and stable careers

 ?? Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AFP via Getty Images ?? Pro-Daca demonstrat­ors arrive in front of the US supreme court during the ‘Home Is Here’ March in Washington on Monday.
Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AFP via Getty Images Pro-Daca demonstrat­ors arrive in front of the US supreme court during the ‘Home Is Here’ March in Washington on Monday.

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