A journey that doesn’t stop at the border

FOR the tens of thousands of Central American unaccompanied children who have entered into the US in recent years, the journey doesn’t stop at the border: They must appear at an immigration hearing where a judge decides if they have legal relief to stay in the country.

A journey that doesn’t stop at the border

However, only about half of these children are represented by a lawyer in court.

Around 48% of unaccompanied children who had immigration cases decided between 2005 and June 2014 went through their hearings without legal representation, according to Syracuse University’s Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse Immigration Project.

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