| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| Virgil Wiebe |
The Immigration Hotel |
68 Rutgers University Law Review 1673 (Summer, 2016) |
The Supreme Court, in Reno v. Flores, upheld a regulation promulgated by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) requiring that alien juveniles who are suspected of being deportable be placed with government selected or operated institutions, where no parent, close relative, or legal guardian is available to assume custody. Despite the... |
1995 |
| Carrie Rosenbaum |
What (And Whom) State Marijuana Reformers Forgot: Crimmigration Law and Noncitizens |
9 DePaul Journal for Social Justice 1 (Summer, 2016) |
What does the United States of America mean to most immigrants? Historically, the United States symbolized a spirit of liberty, which was reflected in the free and democratic tradition of its society. Inside its borders, they saw a land of opportunity where the hopes and aspirations of any individual could be fully realized. For the world's poor... |
1995 |
| Elizabeth Keyes |
Defining American: the Dream Act, Immigration Reform and Citizenship |
14 Nevada Law Journal 101 (Fall 2013) |
For post-prandial remarks, at this conference, I have decided to address only a huge subject, to talk only about what you already know, and to invite you to join me in a perhaps-quixotic battle. The title of my remarks is Immigration and the Constitution: A Clean Slate. For many of you, this title will ring bells. Many of you will recall the... |
1994 |
| Ediberto Roman |
Immigration and the Allure of Inclusion |
35 Seton Hall Law Review 1349 (2005) |
Immigration reform is rapidly becoming a major political issue in 1994. With economic growth at a standstill and a new wave of immigrants rushing to our shores, some sixty-five percent of Americans now favor tighter immigration laws. Dozens of immigration bills have been introduced in Congress, bills which call for everything from a strengthening... |
1994 |
| Ilya Somin |
Immigration, Freedom, and the Constitution |
40 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 1 (April, 2017) |
In reading about the history behind this lecture series, I was struck by how Lawrence I. Gerber is described: as a man born in New York City of immigrant parents who went on to attend City College and NYU Law School, who loved the law and remained faithful to it through 60 years of practice. His, in short, was the story of the American dream, a... |
1994 |
| Michael Scaperlanda |
Justice Thurgood Marshall and the Legacy of Dissent in Federal Alienage Cases |
47 Oklahoma Law Review 55 (Spring, 1994) |
In this article, Professor Scanlan argues that in spite of recent trends toward globalism, traditionally composed nation-states, especially the United States, will continue to exercise localized control over immigration and receiving nations may pursue increasingly restrictive policies. The author begins with a history of recent U.S. and European... |
1994 |
| Gabriel J. Chin |
Regulating Race: Asian Exclusion and the Administrative State |
37 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 1 (Winter, 2002) |
On September 27, 1987, Dong-lu Chen confronted his wife, Jian-wan, about her suspected infidelity. Jian-wan admitted that she was having an extramarital affair. Dong-lu was so enraged by his wife's infidelity that he rushed into another room, picked up a hammer, and then smashed it into his wife's head eight times. Jian-wan subsequently died from... |
1994 |
| Shayak Sarkar |
TAX LAW'S MIGRATION |
62 Boston College Law Review 2209 (October, 2021) |
Thanks largely to A Theory of Justice , Professor John Rawls' modern classic, justice has been a preoccupation of political philosophers in the second half of the Twentieth Century. But Rawls - and Aristotle, who was occupied with justice 2,300 years earlier, and virtually all the many others in between - addressed the just society as... |
1994 |
| Dave McCurdy |
The Future of U.s. Immigration Law |
20 Journal of Legislation 3 (1994) |
The passage of the Immigration Act of 1990 and its subsequent signature by President Bush represent the closing of a shameful chapter in United States history. The new law repealed many of the exclusionary provisions of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), among them, the exclusion of homosexuals. The quiet and unspectacular passage of the... |
1994 |
| Monika Batra Kashyap |
U.s. Settler Colonialism, White Supremacy, and the Racially Disparate Impacts of Covid-19 |
11 California Law Review Online 517 (November, 2020) |
Thurgood Marshall, whose name will be forever etched in the memory of a nation, tirelessly prodded the American conscience, searing the ugliness of segregation and racial hatred, calling us to reach deep within ourselves to discover the better part of our human nature. Yes, he will be remembered as the first black justice of the United States... |
1994 |