| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Alvin Hoi-Chun Hung |
DID EXCLUSION IGNITE CHINA'S DRIVE TO COMPETE IN SPACE STATION TECHNOLOGY? AN ANALYSIS OF THE TECHNO-LEGAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE WOLF AMENDMENT (2011) |
2022 University of Illinois Journal of Law, Technology and Policy 119 (Spring, 2022) |
Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore. Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! [T]here must be a way to honor the country's founding ethic and overwhelmingly positive experience of immigration without potentially... |
1997 |
| Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol , Kimberly A. Johns |
Global Rights, Local Wrongs, and Legal Fixes: an International Human Rights Critique of Immigration and Welfare "Reform" |
71 Southern California Law Review 547 (March, 1998) |
I. Introduction. 834 II. A History of Exclusion and Deportation of Political Undesirables. 841 A. The Haymarket Riots. 844 B. The Wobblies and the Palmer Raids. 846 C. The Communist Threat'. 850 1. Some Chilling Tales. 850 2. The War Against Harry Bridges. 857 D. Modern Efforts to Monitor Political Ideology. 860 1. The 1990 Act: Limits on and... |
1997 |
| Michelle R. Slack |
Ignoring the Lessons of History: How the "Open Borders" Myth Led to Repeated Patterns in State and Local Immigration Control |
27 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 467 (Winter, 2014) |
I. What is an American? Citizenship and Race in the Creation of National Identity. 268 A. Citizenship and Race. 270 B. Citizenship and Loyalty. 278 II. Asian Americans Encounter Racial Identity and Hierarchy. 281 A. Race as a Social and Legal Construct. 283 B. The Creation of Black and White in America. 284 C. The Racing of Asian Americans. 289... |
1997 |
| James F. Hollifield , Valerie F. Hunt , Daniel J. Tichenor |
Immigrants, Markets, and Rights: the United States as an Emerging Migration State |
27 Washington University Journal of Law and Policy 7 (2008) |
Immigration into the United States, both documented and undocumented, has grown steadily over the past two decades and now exceeds one million persons per year. In a time of shrinking government budgets, stagnant or declining real wages, and job instability, immigration has again become a politically charged issue. Whether based on fact, fiction or... |
1997 |
| Fatma E. Marouf |
Implicit Bias and Immigration Courts |
45 New England Law Review 417 (Spring 2011) |
In Strangers to the Constitution, Professor Gerald Neuman explores the constitutional foundations of immigration law and aliens' rights in the United States. In this Essay, Professor Motomura explains that while Neuman makes a pathbreaking contribution to immigration law scholarship, much of his persuasiveness depends on two key premises. First,... |
1997 |
| Andrew B. Ayers |
International Law as a Tool of Constitutional Interpretation in the Early Immigration Power Cases |
19 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 125 (Fall, 2004) |
In the midst of current anti-immigration sentiment, which is motivating dramatic changes in the United States' immigration laws, there exists the myth that prior immigration laws were more equitable and humanitarian. Yet historical analysis reveals that immigration law has been put to uses far from idyllic, and has always been concerned with the... |
1997 |
| Hilal Elver |
Racializing Islam Before and after 9/11: from Melting Pot to Islamophobia |
21 Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 119 (Spring 2012) |
My family's history is not uncommon. My ancestors immigrated from Central America to the United States in the mid 1960s through the early 1970s in search of a brighter future. Several of the women in my family accepted jobs as domestic workers when they first arrived in order to make ends meet. What they endured as immigrant domestic workers is a... |
1997 |
| Michael Doran |
The Equal-protection Challenge to Federal Indian Law |
6 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law & Public Affairs 1 (November, 2020) |
the ongoing struggle of defining what it means to be American has infected public policy and political debates in a manner that almost defies characterization. The rhetoric about the threats to the American way of life posed by noncitizens is linked to immigration policy because of a heightened awareness of the increased presence of noncitizens... |
1997 |
| Peter Margulies |
Uncertain Arrivals: Immigration, Terror, and Democracy after September 11 |
2002 Utah Law Review 481 (2002) |
To become a United States citizen, a lawful permanent resident alien must successfully demonstrate a knowledge of United States history and government. A standard examination question is: How many branches are there in the federal government of the United States? The correct answer of course is three branches. However, where immigration... |
1997 |
| Lindsay N. Wise |
People Not Equal: a Glimpse into the Use of Profiling and the Effect a Pending U.n. Human Rights Committee Case May Have on United States' Policy |
14 Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 303 (Spring, 2008) |
INTRODUCTION. 348 I. The Enigma of Race. 355 A. Theories of Racial Identity. 355 1. Biological Race. 355 2. Socially Constructed Race. 358 B. Constructions of Asian Americans. 359 1. Historical Constructions of Asian Identities. 359 a. Constructions of Early Chinese Immigrants. 362 b. Constructions of Early Japanese Immigrants. 371 c. Chinese and... |
1996 |