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DACA Recipients Prepare for An Uncertain Future

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Dian Alarcon is comforted while joining with immigrant rights advocates, worker's unions, allied organizations and immigrant families on the steps of the Freedom Tower to speak to the media June 23, 2016 in Miami, Florida. (Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, known as DACA, has given more than half a million immigrants protection from deportation since 2012. The program has allowed people brought to the United States as children to work, buy property, start businesses and raise families. The program has weathered plenty of challenges in its 12-year history, and now many recipients are worried that president-elect Donald Trump will try to end the program like he did during his first term. We talk with DACA recipients about how they are preparing for the future and what could happen next.

Guests:

Dulce Garcia, director for U.S.-Mexico border programs, She is a lawyer and DACA recipient.

Sarah Souza, DACA recipient and immigrant rights activist, Serves on the San Francisco Immigrant Rights Commission and works as a legislative aide for San Francisco Supervisor Aaron Peskin.

Krsna Avila , staff attorney, Path2Papers - a project of Cornell Law School that helps DACA recipients pursue work visas and other pathways to legal permanent residency.

Leo Rodriguez, student, Univeristy of California, Berkeley - DACA recipient.

Raha Wala, human rights lawyer, lobbyist, and advocacy strategist, National Immigration Law Center

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