The new Mapping Deportations website and organizing tool reveals through never-before-seen mapping, how systemic racism has defined who gets to stay and who must go. The data shows that 96% of all deportations have been to countries in Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia, and Africa. In short, Mapping Deportations illustrates how the immigration laws, and particularly deportation policy, have engineered the racial make-up of the country since its founding—a phenomenon that is taking place in plain sight today.
Therefore, Trump’s abrupt decision to slap a $100,000 fee on H-1B visas and adding THe Gambia to the B-1 and B-2 visas bond program is not historically news. Generally, India accounts for about 74 percent of all H-1B visa approvals, followed by China at 16 percent, No other country accounted for more than three percent.
Gambians will now have to post a bond when applying for B-1 (business) or B-2 (tourism) visitor visas. Previously, Malawi and Zambia were on the list.
The Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law and Million Dollar Hoods have partnered to create Mapping Deportations that traces every deportation order in the U.S. since 1895.
“We created this project to create an interdisciplinary approach to explore the country’s history of exclusion, deportation, and punishment. Through our work, we center the research expertise of academics guided by a broad understanding of what the 8 million deportation orders issued since 1895 say about who belongs, who has systemically been pushed out, and what that means in today’s immigration climate,” said Professor Kelly Lytle Hernández, who holds the Thomas E. Lifka Endowed Chair of History at UCLA and is founding director of the Million Dollar Hoods research initiative.
The website took five years to complete and is a collaboration between Hernández, Mariah Tso, GIS Specialist for the Ralph J. Bunche Center and the Million Dollar Hoods Project, and Professor Ahilan Arulanantham, CILP Faculty Co-Director and Professor from Practice at UCLA School of Law.






