foreign and domestic policy gap: the resettlement of our allies.
When U.S. foreign policy involves overt intervention abroad, the employment of local nationals is common and necessary. Foreign nationals who work for the U.S., in some instances, are threatened due to that relationship. In specific cases, policymakers have authorized and funded the immigration of f...
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/2047/D20196359 |
Summary: | When U.S. foreign policy involves overt intervention abroad, the employment of local nationals is common and necessary. Foreign nationals who work for the U.S., in some instances, are threatened due to that relationship. In specific cases, policymakers have authorized and funded the immigration of foreign nationals who had worked for and with the U.S. and were targeted due to that relationship. However, the U.S. has no consistent policy on the domestic resettlement of
foreign nationals as a consequence of their support of US military interventions. |
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