Issues & Ideas Between Two Nations:
The U.S. is deporting ex-offenders to a Cambodia they never knew.
Immigration law gives judges little discretion. A U.S.-funded program
offers help with housing, jobs, health care, and learning Khmer.
1/13/07 NATIONAL JOURNAL, By Bruce Stokes,
bstokes@nationaljournal.com
No Way Home; A Cambodian gang member from St.
Paul is banished to a country he doesn’t know; The Rake Magazine; June
2006.
RAP becomes RISP with new USAID grant; The Phnom
Penh Post, December 2-15, 2005
Cambodia Deportees, ABC TV (Australia), October
4, 2005
Strangers in their homeland, The Cambodia Daily,
July 30, 2005
A Cambodian Pilgrim's Progress: Back to a Bitter
Sea; New York Times; November 6, 2004
In a Homeland Far From Home, New York Times,
November 16, 2003
Strangers in a Strange Land, Hyphen Magazine,
Summer 2003
Cambodians deported home, BBC News, February 11,
2003
A bumpy road ahead for US deportees to Cambodia,
Christian Science Monitor, January 21, 2003
Home isn't sweet for Cambodians deported from
U.S., The Seattle Times, January 14, 2003
Deported for Shoplifting?, The Washington Post,
December 27, 2002
One-way ticket for convicted Cambodians; CNN;
November 19, 2002
Home at last - deportees start lives over, Phnom
Penh Post, September 27, 2002
US Deportees Settle Into Life in Cambodia; The
Cambodia Daily; July 18, 2002
Refugees with a record face shock --
deportation; Seattle Post - Intelligencer; June 14, 2002
Cambodians Face Deportation; Americas.org; 2002