翻訳と辞書
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・ Self-defeating
・ Self-defeating personality disorder
・ Self-defeating prophecy
・ Self-defence (Australia)
・ Self-defence in English law
・ Self-defence in international law
・ Self-Defence of the Republic of Poland
・ Self-defense
・ Self-defense (Sweden)
・ Self-defense (United States)
・ Self-defense force
・ Self-Defense Training Camp
・ Self-denial
・ Self-denying Ordinance
・ Self-denying Ordinance (French Revolution)
Self-deportation
・ Self-deprecation
・ Self-descriptive number
・ Self-destruct
・ Self-destructive behaviour
・ Self-Destructive Pattern
・ Self-determination
・ Self-determination (disambiguation)
・ Self-determination and Freedom
・ Self-determination of Australian Aborigines
・ Self-determination theory
・ Self-development plan
・ Self-diagnosis
・ Self-diffusion
・ Self-directed investment clubs


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Self-deportation : ウィキペディア英語版
Self-deportation
Self-deportation is an approach to dealing with migrants in the United States that involves the creation of legal structures which will make life in the US so difficult as to encourage migrants to voluntarily return to their home countries, rather than organized efforts of law enforcement to locate and deport them. The 2012 Republican Party platform included self-deporation as a response to Illegal immigration to the United States. The platform also calls for robust border enforcement, opposition to “any forms of amnesty,” and the self-deportation of migrants through “humane procedures to encourage migrants to return home voluntarily.”
==History==
This term was used as early as 1984 in a ''People'' article about the film director Roman Polanski, which referred to his self-deporting. The term gained its current association with illegal immigration in the 1990s, especially in California. In 1994, William Safire described its usage by California governor Pete Wilson's immigration strategy, exemplified by Proposition 187, which prevented illegal aliens from using a variety of state social services. Safire summarized the philosophy of the approach as holding that "the most cost-effective way to change behavior is to make life unbearable under present behavior." The same year, Lalo Alcaraz and Esteban Zul launched a satirical campaign involving a character named "Daniel D. Portado" (a pun on ''deportado'', Spanish for ''deported''), who facetiously promoted self-deportation.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Self-deportation」の詳細全文を読む



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