Ethnic Conflict, Statelessness, and Forced Migration in the Dominican Republic
Ethnic Conflict, Statelessness, and Forced Migration in the Dominican Republic The School for Ethics and Global Leadership, Fall 2015 November 29, 2015 Table of Contents Sections Page Authors and Introduction 2 Executive Summary 3 History and Current Status 5 Recommendations to the Government of the Dominican Republic 14 Recommendations to the Government of Haiti 20 Recommendations to the Government of the United States 28 Recommendations to the International Community 36 Recommendations to International Non-Governmental Organizations 46 1 Authors Executive Summary Rocco Blum, Hayden Clark, Luke Landis, Tara Maloney, Loughlin Neuert, Charles Olafsson History Nathaniel Blumenthal, Katherine Concannon, Brady Huang, Tara Maloney Dominican Republic Madison Cochrane, Rudairo Mudede, Charles Olafsson, Helena Thomas Haiti Jacob DeMarchi, Loughlin Neuert, Saphia Suarez, Madeleine Yi United States Rocco Blum, Taylor Correa White, Casey Lake, George Sarno International Community Hayden Clark, Sadie Emch, Kayla Getter, Ava Levin NGOs Hunter Davis, Adeline Kim, Luke Landis, Carly Wellener We would like to thank our bibliotherapist Dr. David Ettinger, the International Affairs and Political Science Librarian at the Gelman Library of The George Washington University, for aiding us in our research. Introduction This policy document, written during the fall of 2015, was created by 24 high school juniors who attend The School for Ethics and Global Leadership (SEGL). SEGL is a semester long residential program in Washington, D.C. that provides intellectually motivated students with the best possible opportunity to shape themselves into ethical leaders who will create positive change in our world. The Fall 2015 semester created this policy document to provide practical and ethical solutions to the current conflict between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
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