| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Mariela Olivares |
Resistance Strategies in the Immigrant Justice Movement |
39 Northern Illinois University Law Review 1 (Fall, 2018) |
Over the past decade, scholars have paid increasing attention to Japanese American constitutional history. For the most part, this literature focuses on the United States government's decision during World War II to intern people of Japanese ancestry. This body of work literature is designed to demonstrate the extent to which, and precisely how,... |
2009 |
| Ediberto Román |
The Citizenship Dialectic |
20 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 557 (Summer, 2006) |
The history of immigration in the United States of America reaches beyond the establishment of the country itself. Beginning with the arrival of explorers, slaves, and the Pilgrims, there were a number of different ethnic groups that migrated to the United States. While the diversity ultimately helped shape America into a culturally rich nation,... |
2009 |
| Anna Welch, Emily Gorrivan |
ETHNO-NATIONALISM AND ASYLUM LAW |
74 Maine Law Review 187 (2022) |
I. Introduction. 255 II. Global Migration and Re-Imagining National Identity. 259 III. 200 years, 150 years, and U.S. Citizenship: Ending the Transatlantic Slave Trade and Then Imagining in Dred Scott. 263 IV. 110 years, Chinese Migration, and Wong Kim Ark: Imagining Citizenship in New Global Contexts for the United States and China. 266 V. Current... |
2008 |
| Eisha Jain |
POLICING THE POLITY |
131 Yale Law Journal 1794 (April, 2022) |
Introduction. 740 I. Historical Context: The Chinese Exclusion Era. 745 II. The Story of Ah Sou. 748 A. Life in the United States. 748 B. In the District Court. 752 C. In the Ninth Circuit. 754 III. International and Domestic Legal Framework. 755 A. International Human Rights Law. 755 B. Domestication of International Human Rights Norms. 757 IV. Ah... |
2008 |
| Louis Henkin |
The Constitution and United States Sovereignty: a Century of Chinese Exclusion and its Progeny |
100 Harvard Law Review 853 (February, 1987) |
The Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), as it must, excludes a terrorist from receiving asylum. The substantive criteria, and the adjudicative procedures set forth under the INA for the identification of the undeserving terrorist inevitably exclude those who are neither terrorists nor otherwise undeserving. Such unintended consequences are... |
2008 |
| Adeno Addis |
Who's Afraid of Foreigners? The Restrictions on Alien Ownership of Electronic Media |
32 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 133 (Fall, 2000) |
When we teach our students law, we introduce them to a world. It is a world that they will inhabit for many years to come, one that we hope will enable them, not only as lawyers, but as citizens, to lead better, more worthwhile lives. But our very entry into such a world is simultaneously the successful inculcation of a canon, a rule of practice... |
2008 |
| Sadie M. Casamenti |
ACTS OF JUSTICE: RESTORING JUSTICE FOR IMMIGRANTS THROUGH STATE PARDONS |
43 Cardozo Law Review 2473 (August, 2022) |
All nations distinguish between their citizens and others. In the United States, the primary set of laws for determining these distinctions is found in our immigration policy. The term immigration law refers to a rather narrow set of rules covering essentially two aspects of a non-citizen's stay in the United States: first, those rules that... |
2008 |
| Bolatito Kolawole |
African Immigrants, Intersectionality, and the Increasing Need for Visibility in the Current Immigration Debate |
7 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 373 (2017) |
AMERICA is in the midst of an immigration crisis. Immigrants are now seen as a threat to Anglo-American culture. Military-like efforts are now being made to seal off the United States-Mexico border, resulting in thousands of deaths. In response to proposals to enact harsh immigration laws, immigrants took to the streets in cities across America in... |
2008 |
| The Honorable Karen Nelson Moore |
Aliens and the Constitution |
88 New York University Law Review 801 (June, 2013) |
Around the same time that Critical Race Theory (CRT) was emerging as a field in law in the mid-1980's, the term, New Economic Sociology (NES) was coined at a roundtable discussion at the 1985 annual meeting of the American Sociological Association. Like CRT, NES was challenging fundamental disciplinary principles and assumptions. Just as... |
2008 |
| Mariela Olivares |
Battered by Law: the Political Subordination of Immigrant Women |
64 American University Law Review 231 (December, 2014) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 303 II. Incidents of Unequal Treatment and Profiling of Aliens in the United States. 305 III. Why Profiling is Permitted When Applied to Aliens: An Overview of Immigration Law in the United States. 311 IV. Why the Plenary Power Doctrine Should be Modified to Prevent Discriminatory Profiling of Aliens. 314 V.... |
2008 |