| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Shani M. King |
Child Migrants and America's Evolving Immigration Mission |
32 Harvard Human Rights Journal 59 (Spring, 2019) |
Daniel Kanstroom's Deportation Nation is a timely historical text that provides a context and framework to the existing campaigns of stepped-up federal and local immigration enforcement as well as for the Obama administration's plans for comprehensive immigration reform. Whereas other migration scholars such as Ngai, Johnson, and De Genova have... |
2010 |
| Daniel Kanstroom |
Deportation, Social Control, and Punishment: Some Thoughts about Why Hard Laws Make Bad Cases |
113 Harvard Law Review 1889 (June, 2000) |
For those of us who work in the field of Asian American history, we have long confronted the issues and consequences of White supremacy, exclusion, the erasure of Asian Americans from the national historical consciousness, and the marginalization of our efforts in the American academy. Fortunately, a handful of scholars/activists has kept our... |
2010 |
| David Cole |
Enemy Aliens |
54 Stanford Law Review 953 (May, 2002) |
I. Introduction. 1486 II. Continuing Impact of Post 9-11 Immigration Practices. 1491 A. PENTBOTTM Detentions and OIG Detainee Report. 1401 B. OIG MDC Report. 1493 C. Turkmen Lawsuit. 1495 D. 48 Hour Rule. 1497 E. Closed Hearings. 1499 F. Alien Absconder Initiative. 1499 G. Voluntary Interview Program. 1501 H. Special Registration. 1502 I. Other... |
2010 |
| Lisa J. Laplante |
Expedited Removal at U.s. Borders: a World Without a Constitution |
25 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 213 (1999) |
I. Introduction. 412 II. Racialization Thesis: Post-September 11 Responses to Arabs, Muslims, and South Asians. 414 A. Processes of Racial Formation. 415 B. Orientalism and the Perpetual Foreigner Motif. 417 III. Alienation: A Reworking of the Racialization Thesis. 420 A. Definition of Alienation. 420 B. Specific Instances of Alienation after... |
2010 |
| Ernesto Hernández-López |
Kiyemba, Guantánamo, and Immigration Law: an Extraterritorial Constitution in a Plenary Power World |
2 UC Irvine Law Review 193 (February, 2012) |
In this essay, we introduce the heuristics of dystopian dream and usable future to assess competing visions for immigration reform. We apply these heuristics to potential changes to the U.S. immigration system and immigration federalism as reflected in legislative and law enforcement activities, policy proposals, speeches, and scholarship. We... |
2010 |
| Jordan Jodré |
Preemptive Strike: the Battle for Control over Immigration Policy |
25 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 551 (Spring, 2011) |
It has happened to everyone who has ever practiced in the United States immigration field. Your client's petition is approved by the United States Citizen and Immigration Services (USCIS). After a long and arduous process, in most cases several years, your client finally arrives at the United States embassy in his home country for his interview on... |
2010 |
| George A. Martínez |
Race and Immigration Law: a Paradigm Shift? |
2000 University of Illinois Law Review 517 (2000) |
Latino immigrants are moving to areas of the country that have not seen a major influx of immigrants. As a result of this influx, citizens of these formerly homogenous communities have become increasingly critical of federal immigration law. State and local legislatures are responding by passing their own laws targeting immigrants. While many... |
2010 |
| Robert L. Tsai |
Racial Purges |
118 Michigan Law Review 1127 (April, 2020) |
More than one hundred years of American jurisprudence suggests that some aliens are more alien than others. As such, their rights may be understood as lying along a spectrum ranging from those whose sole contact with the United States is with United States authorities located in a foreign territory to those who have resided in the United States for... |
2010 |
| Caprice L. Roberts |
Rights, Remedies, and Habeas Corpus--the Uighurs, Legally Free While Actually Imprisoned |
24 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 1 (Fall, 2009) |
Preface. 6 I. Introduction. 7 An Explanation of Terms: Narratives and Stereotypes. 10 II. Locating Asian American Jurisprudence in Legal Scholarship. 11 A. Asian American Identity. 11 1. Identification and Identity Projects. 12 2. Three Asian American Identity Projects. 14 B. Interrogation of Legal Materials. 17 1. Three Asian American Historical... |
2010 |
| Laila Hlass |
The School to Deportation Pipeline |
34 Georgia State University Law Review 697 (Spring, 2018) |
This Article offers a new interpretation of the modern federal immigration power. At the end of the nineteenth century, the Supreme Court and Congress fundamentally transformed the federal government's authority to regulate immigration, from a species of commercial regulation firmly grounded in Congress's commerce authority, into a power that was... |
2010 |