Overview
Each year thousands of people come to the United States seeking protection—more than 62,000 applied for asylum in 1998 alone. America is a country of immigrants with a proud tradition of welcoming refugees from persecution. Yet most Americans object to high levels of illegal immigration, and many feel that poor immigrants are a burden to the society. These conflicting views are played out in a complex system of asylum adjudication that has developed over the last twenty years. The Mercy Factory is the first book to examine that system. It does so by telling the stories of five refugees, following them from their experience of persecution in their home countries to their arrival in the United States and their progress through the barriers of the American immigration legal system. The stories are both tragic and inspiring, but they also illuminate the workings of the asylum system and the dilemmas often faced by immigration officials and judges who must make life or death decisions in limited time, with limited information at hand. Throughout his absorbing narrative, Mr. Einolf explains the basic law of asylum in layman's terms, examines the history of the asylum adjudication system, and suggests proposals for reform.
Synopsis
A legal representative for asylum applicants and advocate for children in Immigration and Naturalization Service detention, Einolf profiles five of his clients. Where possible he works from tape recordings of interviews and proceedings, and otherwise from notes verified by the informant.
Annotation © Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
Book Review Digest - Donald Kerwin
Einolf offers a gripping firsthand account of the challenges, terror, and exhileration of representing political asylum-seekers.
Editorials
Book Review Digest
Einolf offers a gripping firsthand account of the challenges, terror, and exhileration of representing political asylum-seekers. The book vividly captures the work's life and death intensity.— Donald Kerwin
Catholic Legal Immigration Network
A persecuting journey...packed with real life stories.— James Haggerty
Lawyers Committee For Human Rights
The Mercy Factory powerfully documents how refugees are treated and mistreated when they seek refuge in the United States.— Gene Guerrero
Donald Kerwin
Einolf offers a gripping firsthand account of the challenges, terror, and exhileration of representing political asylum-seekers.—Book Review Digest