Event Title
Undocumented Students and the Right to Education
Description
Over 25 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court held that undocumented students have a right to K12 education, but avoided ruling that it was a constitutional right. However, access to public colleges for undocumented students varies drastically across the United States: 18 states charge undocumented students in-state tuition and six provide state financial aid, but three states prohibit in-state tuition by law and two states legally ban undocumented students. In this panel, historian Pedro Cameselle, immigration attorney Hannah Stone, and students from Western’s Idea Institute and the WWU Blue Group will review the past, current and future challenges facing undocumented students through history, law, and policy.
About the Lecturers:
Pedro Cameselle is assistant Professor of History at WWU. He is originally from Uruguay and his research is on US-Latin American relations.
Victoria Matey Mendoza is a senior at WWU studying Business Administration and Marketing. She has a fellowship from the WWU Idea Institute to educate the campus community on the status and rights of undocumented students. She is also the internal coordinator of the Ethnic Student Center and served as the president of the WWU Blue Group in 2016-2017
Hannah E. Stone is a local attorney who limits her practice to solely U.S. immigration and citizenship law. She obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree in International Studies and Spanish Language from Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina. Hannah obtained her Juris Doctor degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Law where she studied with one of the nation’s foremost immigration law professors, Hiroshi Motomura. While in school, she taught English to migrant farm-workers at the local labor camps in North Carolina. She and her husband decided to relocate to Washington State after she completed an internship with the Center for Social Justice in Seattle.
Western Washington University Blue Group’s purpose is to support HB 1079 students and other undocumented students in pursuit of a higher education at Western. The mission of the Blue Group is to provide undocumented students with a safer space to meet other undocumented students, find resources, services, and build community.
Document Type
Event
Start Date
17-1-2018 4:30 PM
End Date
17-1-2018 5:50 PM
Location
Fairhaven College Auditorium
Resource Type
Moving image
Title of Series
World Issues Forum
Genre/Form
lectures
Contributing Repository
Fairhaven College of Interdisciplinary Studies
Subjects – Topical (LCSH)
Undocumented immigrants--Education (Higher)--Government policy--United States; Universities and colleges--Residence requirements--United States; Undocumented immigrants--United States--Students--Attitudes; Immigrant students--United States
Geographic Coverage
United States
Type
Moving image
Keywords
Undocumented students, Right to education, Access to public colleges
Rights
This resource is displayed for educational purposes only and may be subject to U.S. and international copyright laws.
Language
English
Format
video/mp4
Undocumented Students and the Right to Education
Fairhaven College Auditorium
Over 25 years ago, the U.S. Supreme Court held that undocumented students have a right to K12 education, but avoided ruling that it was a constitutional right. However, access to public colleges for undocumented students varies drastically across the United States: 18 states charge undocumented students in-state tuition and six provide state financial aid, but three states prohibit in-state tuition by law and two states legally ban undocumented students. In this panel, historian Pedro Cameselle, immigration attorney Hannah Stone, and students from Western’s Idea Institute and the WWU Blue Group will review the past, current and future challenges facing undocumented students through history, law, and policy.
About the Lecturers:
Pedro Cameselle is assistant Professor of History at WWU. He is originally from Uruguay and his research is on US-Latin American relations.
Victoria Matey Mendoza is a senior at WWU studying Business Administration and Marketing. She has a fellowship from the WWU Idea Institute to educate the campus community on the status and rights of undocumented students. She is also the internal coordinator of the Ethnic Student Center and served as the president of the WWU Blue Group in 2016-2017
Hannah E. Stone is a local attorney who limits her practice to solely U.S. immigration and citizenship law. She obtained her Bachelor of Arts degree in International Studies and Spanish Language from Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina. Hannah obtained her Juris Doctor degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Law where she studied with one of the nation’s foremost immigration law professors, Hiroshi Motomura. While in school, she taught English to migrant farm-workers at the local labor camps in North Carolina. She and her husband decided to relocate to Washington State after she completed an internship with the Center for Social Justice in Seattle.
Western Washington University Blue Group’s purpose is to support HB 1079 students and other undocumented students in pursuit of a higher education at Western. The mission of the Blue Group is to provide undocumented students with a safer space to meet other undocumented students, find resources, services, and build community.