| Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
| L. Darnell Weeden |
Introduction: Race & Immigration Symposium |
44 Arizona State Law Journal L.J. 1 (Spring 2012) |
We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union and establish Justice and Fairness for all persons, shall promote domestic Tranquility by giving Voice and constitutional Protections to all Immigrants dwelling with us, regardless of their racial identity or documentation status. This Race & Immigration Symposium issue,... |
2012 |
| Len Munsil |
Justice and Compassion: Applying Biblical Truth to the Problem of Illegal Immigration |
9 Regent Journal of International Law 11 (2012) |
Thank you for the invitation to be a part of this important Symposium at Regent University School of Law. I was invited to speak in a seminar here sponsored by the American Center for Law and Justice in 1993, when Regent was just in its early stages, and I have been so impressed by the growth in Regent's academic programs, facilities, and national... |
2012 |
| Ernesto Hernández-López |
Kiyemba, Guantánamo, and Immigration Law: an Extraterritorial Constitution in a Plenary Power World |
2 UC Irvine Law Review 193 (February, 2012) |
Introduction. 194 I. The Exclusions of Plenary Powers. 200 II. Immigration Law: The Fallback Doctrinal Justification for Guantánamo Detentions. 204 A. Boumediene: Limits on Alien Status and Location as Bars to Constitutional Habeas. 205 B. The Kiyemba Triumvirate: Immigration Law and the Fallback to Detain After Habeas. 210 C. Kiyemba and... |
2012 |
| Leticia M. Saucedo |
Mexicans, Immigrants, Cultural Narratives, and National Origin |
44 Arizona State Law Journal 305 (Spring 2012) |
This article explores U.S. cultural narratives about Mexicans and immigrants and their ultimate effect on the evolution of national origin jurisprudence in workplace anti-discrimination law. Several scholars have argued that national-origin jurisprudence fails to account for the racialized history of Mexicans in this country and have called for a... |
2012 |
| Rosemary C. Salomone |
Multilingualism and Multiculturalism: Transatlantic Discourses on Language, Identity, and Immigrant Schooling |
87 Notre Dame Law Review 2031 (June, 2012) |
In September 2010, an eye-catching article appeared on the front page of the New York Times Arts section. The headline read, Cultures United to Honor Separatism. Basque and Catalan nationalists, Sinn Fein leaders, and others were convening on the island of Corsica, not to chart out war strategies, as might have been expected, but rather to... |
2012 |
| Jennifer M. Chacón |
Overcriminalizing Immigration |
102 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 613 (Summer 2012) |
Although there is a burgeoning literature on the criminalization of migration, immigration issues are not usually included in academic conversations surrounding overcriminalization. Criminal law scholars may not have been particularly attuned to developments in the world of immigration law because they have understood it to be primarily the domain... |
2012 |
| John C. Eastman |
Papers, Please: Does the Constitution Permit the States a Role in Immigration Enforcement? |
35 Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy 569 (Spring, 2012) |
Arizona kicked up quite a dust storm in 2010 when it enacted Senate Bill 1070 (S.B. 1070). Proponents hoped the law would help Arizona control the burgeoning illegal immigration into the state and its attendant costs-- costs that affect the financial stability of the state, the safety of its residents, and the very rule of law itself. The legal... |
2012 |
| Keith Aoki , John Shuford , Esmeralda Soria , Emilio Camacho |
Pastures of Peonage?: Tracing the Feedback Loop of Food Through Ip, Gmos, Trade, Immigration, and U.s. Agro-maquilas |
4 Northeastern University Law Journal L.J. 1 (Spring, 2012) |
I. Introduction II. The Rise of Global Agribusiness and GMOs A. Agrichemical Farming and IP Protection for GE Food Crops and PGR B. Industrialization and Concentration of Farming and Food Transport, Processing, and Sales III. Economic Globalization and Labor Migration in North America A. Globalization of Finance and Trade: Effects on Mexico's... |
2012 |
| Dina Kleyman |
Protecting the Border, One Passenger Interrogation at a Time |
77 Brooklyn Law Review 1557 (Summer, 2012) |
The terrorist attacks that occurred on September 11, 2001, represented the ultimate intersection between criminal and immigration law. Because many of the terrorists had entered the United States legally with visas issued by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the tragedy revealed the deficiencies in the administration of laws that... |
2012 |
| Hilal Elver |
Racializing Islam Before and after 9/11: from Melting Pot to Islamophobia |
21 Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems 119 (Spring 2012) |
I. Point of Departure. 119 II. Paving the Road for Racializing Islam: Pre-9/11 Era. 123 A. Muslim Community in the United States. 124 1. Immigrants. 125 2. Natives: African American Muslims. 128 B. Prejudices Against Muslims and Middle Easterners in the Pre-9/11 Era. 130 1. Discrimination Against Middle Easterners and Muslims in the Process of... |
2012 |
| Daniel J. Tichenor, Alexandra Filindra |
Raising Arizona V. United States: Historical Patterns of American Immigration Federalism |
16 Lewis & Clark Law Review 1215 (Winter, 2012) |
Immigration policy and regulation have been hotly contested issues in the United States since the 1800s. At the center of this historic immigration debate have been issues of federalism and core questions under the United States Constitution. Arizona v. United States, one of the Supreme Court's blockbuster decisions of the summer of 2012, has... |
2012 |
| Mary Fan |
Rebellious State Crimmigration Enforcement and the Foreign Affairs Power |
89 Washington University Law Review 1269 (2012) |
The propriety of a new breed of state laws interfering in immigration enforcement is pending before the Supreme Court and the lower courts. These laws typically incorporate federal standards related to the criminalization of immigration (crimmigration), but diverge aggressively from federal enforcement policy. Enacting states argue that the... |
2012 |
| Sallie Dietrich |
Redefining "American": the Constitutionality of State Dream Acts |
31 Law & Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice 165 (Winter, 2012) |
I'm an American; I just don't have the right papers. These are the words of Jose Antonio Vargas, formerly a journalist for the Washington Post, who recently wrote an article describing his experience living in the United States as an undocumented immigrant. The message of the piece is simple: Vargas, who came to the United States illegally as a... |
2012 |
| Fatma E. Marouf |
Regrouping America: Immigration Policies and the Reduction of Prejudice |
15 Harvard Latino Law Review 129 (Spring 2012) |
Introduction. 130 I. Constructing Fuzzy Categories Based on Immigration Status and the Porous Boundaries Between Them. 133 II. Social Categorization and Intergroup Relations. 138 A. The Relationship Between Social Categorization and Intergroup Bias, and Intergroup Conflict. 138 B. Categorization-Based Strategies for Reducing Intergroup Bias. 142... |
2012 |
| Philip Cantwell |
Relevant "Material": Importing the Principles of Informed Consent and Unconscionability to Analyze Consensual Medical Repatriations |
6 Harvard Law & Policy Review 249 (Winter 2012) |
Antonio Torres, a teenage farmworker from Gila Bend, Arizona, suffered catastrophic injuries in a car accident in June 2008. Mr. Torres was a legal immigrant, but he carried no health insurance. His status barred him from federal healthcare funding. Soon after stabilizing him, the hospital began planning to repatriate the comatose Mr. Torres to... |
2012 |
| Doug Keller |
Re-thinking Illegal Entry and Re-entry |
44 Loyola University Chicago Law Journal 65 (Fall 2012) |
This Article traces the history of two federal immigration crimes that have long supplemented the civil immigration system and now make up nearly half of all federal prosecutions: illegal entry and illegal re-entry. Little has been previously written about the historical lineage of either crime, despite the supporting role each has played in... |
2012 |
| Angélica Cházaro |
Rolling Back the Tide: Challenging the Criminalization of Immigrants in Washington State |
11 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 127 (Summer, 2012) |
For the past five years, I have worked as an attorney with the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project (NWIRP), a Washington State-based nonprofit that provides legal representation to low-income immigrants and refugees. NWIRP staff members help people both obtain and defend immigration status. As a NWIRP attorney, part of my job has been to represent... |
2012 |
| Ana Getiashvili |
Safe Localities Through Cooperation: Why the Secure Communities Program Violates the Constitution |
40 Hofstra Law Review 1063 (Summer 2012) |
An undocumented immigrant and a single mother, Tatiana arrived in the United States almost eleven years ago. Since then, she has been working very hard to support her three minor children, all of whom are U.S. citizens. She is a maid and a nanny working for minimum wage, as she does not have valid employment documents. Even though her income is... |
2012 |
| Steven Papazian |
Secure Communities, Sanctuary Laws, and Local Enforcement of Immigration Law: the Story of Los Angeles |
21 Southern California Review of Law & Social Justice 283 (Winter 2012) |
Despite campaign promises to deliver comprehensive immigration reform, in 2010 the Obama Administration removed more than 392,000 unauthorized aliens, the largest number in our nation's history. These removals took place in a dizzying array of federal, state, and local immigration regulation. For example, Arizona's Senate Bill 1070 would have... |
2012 |
| Logan Millians, Tyler S. Sims, Benjamin C. Stidham |
Senate Bill 104 : State Government; Prohibit Policies by Local Governments That Limit/restrict the Enforcement of Immigration Laws |
5 John Marshall Law Journal 757 (Spring 2012) |
First Signature: Senator Jeff Mullis (53rd) Co-Sponsors: Senator Jack Murphy (27th), Senator Bill Heath (31st), Senator Steve Gooch (51st), Senator Barry Loudermilk (52nd), and Senator Bill Jackson (24th) Summary: The Bill was proposed to amend Chapter 36 of Title 50 of the Official Code of Georgia Annotated by providing a more straight-forward and... |
2012 |
| David P. Weber |
State and Local Regulation of Immigration: the Need for a Bilateral (Reciprocal) Ratchet |
18 ILSA Journal of International and Comparative Law 707 (Summer, 2012) |
I. Introduction. 707 II. The Debate over Preemption in Immigration. 710 A. Preemption Defined. 711 B. Immigration-Related Preemption. 712 1. Historic Roots of Preemption. 712 2. Modern Immigration Preemption Trends. 714 a. State Regulation of Immigration. 714 b. Local Regulation of Immigration. 715 i. Local Laws and Ordinances Deemed Preempted. 715... |
2012 |
| Jorge M. Chavez, Anayeli Lopez, Christine M. Englebrecht, Ruben P. Viramontez Anguiano |
Sufren Los Niños: Exploring the Impact of Unauthorized Immigration Status on Children's Well-being |
50 Family Court Review 638 (October, 2012) |
The present study examines the effect of unauthorized immigration status on child well-being at a time of elevated immigration rates, economic decline, and unprecedented local lawmaking related to immigration. Immigrant families today are likely to differ from those of the past in that they are more likely to be from Latin America or the Caribbean... |
2012 |
| Samantha L. Chetrit |
Surviving an Immigration Marriage Fraud Investigation: All You Need Is Love, Luck, and Tight Privacy Controls |
77 Brooklyn Law Review 709 (Winter, 2012) |
Married couples anxiously awaiting interviews with an immigration officer are assured all you need is love. They are told not to worrya fraud interview should not cause concern if their marriage is bona fide. But any couple that has blindly walked into an interview that will determine the validity of its marriage soon discovers the stakes are... |
2012 |
| Ruben J. Garcia |
Ten Years after Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. V. Nlrb: the Power of a Labor Law Symbol |
21 Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy 659 (Spring 2012) |
Introduction. 659 I. The Road to Immigrant Incorporation in the Labor Movement. 663 II. The Hoffman Case: Its Ancestry and Progeny. 665 A. The Pre-Hoffman Legal Climate. 665 B. The Hoffman Decision. 666 III. The Immigrants' Rights Movement, 2002-Present. 668 IV. Assessing the True Impact of Hoffman. 669 V. Hoffman As Legal Symbol. 673 Conclusion.... |
2012 |
| Jennifer Gordon |
Tensions in Rhetoric and Reality at the Intersection of Work and Immigration |
2 UC Irvine Law Review 125 (February, 2012) |
I. Advocates' Core Economic and Workers Rights Arguments. 128 A. Economic. 128 B. Workers Rights. 131 II. Tensions Within and Between the Two Arguments. 135 A. Looking Behind Jobs Americans Won't Do . 136 B. Disaggregating Economists' Findings. 138 C. A Caveat. 143 III. Conclusion. 145 |
2012 |
| Brittney M. Lane |
Testing the Borders: the Boundaries of State and Local Power to Regulate Illegal Immigration |
39 Pepperdine Law Review 483 (February, 2012) |
I. Introduction II. Defining the Borders: The Historical Boundaries of State and Federal Immigration Powers A. This Land Is My Land: Immigration Power from the Colonial Era to the Constitution B. This Land Is Your Land: Federalizing Immigration Power C. A Hole in the Federal Fence: State Police Power Revisited 1. De Canas v. Bica and the State's... |
2012 |
| Angela M. Banks |
The Curious Relationship Between "Self-deportation" Policies and Naturalization Rates |
16 Lewis & Clark Law Review 1149 (Winter, 2012) |
Governor Mitt Romney has stated that the country's immigration problems can be solved through self-deportation. Arizona, Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, and Virginia agree. For example, K-12 public schools in Alabama are required to ascertain the immigration status of all enrolling students. Police officers in Arizona, Alabama, Georgia, South... |
2012 |
| Adriane Meneses |
The Deportation of Lawful Permanent Residents for Old and Minor Crimes: Restoring Judicial Review, Ending Retroactivity, and Recognizing Deportation as Punishment |
14 Scholar: St. Mary's Law Review on Minority Issues 767 (2012) |
I. Introduction. 769 II. Legal History of Criminal Consequences in Immigration Law. 778 A. The Historical Expansion of Grounds of Deportation. 778 1. Crimes Involving Moral Turpitude (CIMTs). 779 2. Narcotics Offenses. 780 3. Evolving Definition of Aggravated Felony . 781 4. 1996 Laws: AEDPA and IIRIRA. 781 B. Elimination of Judicial Review and... |
2012 |
| Robert A. Ferguson |
The Immigrant Plight/immigration Law: a Study in Intractability |
2 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 241 (2012) |
Intractable problems, ones that defy solution because of conflicting lines of force, almost always require an outside catalyst for any movement toward an answer. This Essay explores intractability through two parallel historical moments of conflict: debate over slavery in ante-bellum America and debate over aliens in current America. Severe... |
2012 |
| S. Karthick Ramakrishnan , Pratheepan Gulasekaram |
The Importance of the Political in Immigration Federalism |
44 Arizona State Law Journal 1431 (Winter 2012) |
This Article provides a systematic, empirical investigation of the genesis of state and local immigration regulations, discrediting the popular notion that they are caused by uneven demographic pressures across the country. It also proffers a novel theory to explain the proliferation of these policies and queries the implications of this new model... |
2012 |
| Kim McLane Wardlaw |
The Latino Immigration Experience |
31 Chicana/o-Latina/o Law Review 13 (2012) |
Although we are a country of immigrants and their descendants, the United States has a long history of targeting certain religious, ethnic, and racial groups using laws that appear facially neutral. We are once again experiencing a wave of discrimination against immigrants, and it is once again targeted toward Latinos, and predominantly Mexicans.... |
2012 |
| César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández |
The Perverse Logic of Immigration Detention: Unraveling the Rationality of Imprisoning Immigrants Based on Markers of Race and Class Otherness |
1 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 353 (July, 2012) |
Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels close the first part of the Communist Manifesto by writing, What the bourgeoisie, therefore, produces, above all, is its own grave-diggers. Its fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable. More than a century and a half after Marx and Engels first published that hope, the modern proletariat... |
2012 |
| Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar |
The Political Economies of Immigration Law |
2 UC Irvine Law Review Rev. 1 (February, 2012) |
A largely dysfunctional American immigration system is only poorly explained by simple depictions of the political economy of lawmaking on this issue, blaming factors such as deliberate economic policy choices, longstanding public attitudes, explicit presidential decisions, or general gridlock. Instead, the structure of immigration law emerges from... |
2012 |
| Laura Donohue |
The Potential for a Rise in Wrongful Removals and Detention under the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement's Secure Communities Strategy |
38 New England Journal on Criminal and Civil Confinement 125 (Winter 2012) |
The terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 not only brought down New York City's Twin Towers, but spurred a major reorganization of the federal government's approach to immigration enforcement. In 2002, Congress passed the Homeland Security Act (HSA) creating the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), abolishing the Immigration and Naturalization... |
2012 |
| Michael Hernandez |
The Rule of Law, Historical Equity, and Mexican Contra Prohibition Immigrants |
9 Regent Journal of International Law 29 (2012) |
Events surrounding the recent Presidential election revealed a contentious and politically charged debate regarding immigration issues. President Obama's failure to uphold his campaign promise to pursue comprehensive immigration reform alienated some of his base on the left. His administration's recent adoption of regulations providing immigrants... |
2012 |
| Jennifer M. Chacón |
The Transformation of Immigration Federalism |
21 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal 577 (December, 2012) |
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS: Before you get into what the case is about, I'd like to clear up at the outset what it's not about. No part of your argument has to do with racial or ethnic profiling, does it? I saw none of that in your brief. GENERAL VERRILLI: Where-that's correct, Mr. Chief Justice. CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS: Okay. So this is not a case about... |
2012 |
| Allegra M. McLeod |
The U.s. Criminal-immigration Convergence and its Possible Undoing |
49 American Criminal Law Review 105 (Winter, 2012) |
The intensifying convergence of U.S. criminal law and immigration law poses fundamental structural problems. This convergence--which manifests in the criminal prosecution of immigration law violators, in deportation of criminal law violators, and in a growing immigration enforcement and detention apparatus--distorts criminal law incentives and... |
2012 |
| Jennifer Lee Koh |
The Whole Better than the Sum: a Case for the Categorical Approach to Determining the Immigration Consequences of Crime |
26 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 257 (Winter, 2012) |
The immigration laws have long described categories of crimes that lead to adverse immigration consequences, such as deportation. But how should adjudicators assess whether a given conviction triggers an adverse immigration consequence? The federal courts and administrative agencies have typically employed a methodology--known as the categorical... |
2012 |
| Julie Stewart, Thomas Christian Quinn |
To Include or Exclude: a Comparative Study of State Laws on In-state Tuition for Undocumented Students in the United States |
18 Texas Hispanic Journal of Law and Policy Pol'y 1 (Fall 2012) |
Introduction. 2 I. State-Level Immigration Politics in a National Context. 6 A. Social Science Theories of State-Level Legislation. 8 II. Utah: A Classic New Immigration Destination. 14 A. Utah's H.B. 144: A Unique History and an Uncertain Future. 17 III. In-State Tuition Laws in a National Context. 32 A. The Case of Illinois. 36 B. The Case of... |
2012 |
| Travis Silva |
Toward a Constitutionalized Theory of Immigration Detention |
31 Yale Law and Policy Review 227 (Fall 2012) |
Introduction. 228 I. The Plenary Power Doctrine and Immigration Detention. 230 A. The Origin of the Plenary Power Doctrine. 230 B. Judicial Limitations and Scholarly Criticism. 234 C. The Structure of Immigration Detention. 238 II. Why a Constitutionalized Theory. 243 A. Habeas Corpus, Noncitizens, and Nonpunitive Detention. 243 B. Due Process at... |
2012 |
| Anna Natalie Rol |
U.s. Vs. Them: a Perspective on U.s. Immigration Law Arising from United States V. Rosales-garcia and the Combination of Imprisonment and Deportation |
90 Denver University Law Review 769 (2012) |
This Comment centers on immigration law, specifically, U.S. immigration law. United States v. Rosales-Garcia, a recently published case from the Tenth Circuit, was the original diving board for the thoughts that follow. In Rosales-Garcia, Raul Rosales-Garcia (Rosales), an undocumented immigrant, had been deported following a state drug conviction... |
2012 |
| Molly F. Franck |
Unlawful Arrests and Over-detention of America's Immigrants: What the Federal Government Can Do to Eliminate State and Local Abuse of Immigration Detainers |
9 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 55 (Winter 2012) |
Marcotulio Mendez was a twenty-eight year-old Latino male who lived in Palm Beach County, Florida. One day while Marcotulio was driving home, a police officer from the Sheriff's Office began discretely following him, just a few blocks before Marcotulio reached his residence. Once Marcotulio exited the car and entered his yard, the officer turned on... |
2012 |
| Michael S. Shaddix |
Usda Certified Legal Producers: a Program to Give Consumers a Voice and a Choice in Immigration Reform |
21 San Joaquin Agricultural Law Review 291 (2011-2012) |
The illegal immigration of Mexican farm workers into the United States is a complex and far-reaching issue that affects businesses, consumers, and immigrants alike. In fact, the illegal immigration issue is the impetus behind vast amounts of proposed legislation at the local, state and national levels, with seventy-five percent of Americans... |
2012 |
| Leticia M. Saucedo , Maria Cristina Morales |
Voices Without Law: the Border Crossing Stories and Workplace Attitudes of Immigrants |
21 Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy 641 (Spring 2012) |
Introduction. 641 I. Border Crossing and Workplace Narratives in Action: The Construction Worker Project. 642 II. Background: A Brief History of the Growing Restrictions in Immigration Law. 643 A. The Current Border Crossing Landscape. 647 1. The Realities: Death, Trafficking, Injury and Economic Costs. 647 III. The Masculinities Narratives:... |
2012 |
| Matthew A. Light |
What Does it Mean to Control Migration? Soviet Mobility Policies in Comparative Perspective |
37 Law and Social Inquiry 395 (Spring, 2012) |
The migration policies of the former Soviet Union (or USSR) included a virtual abolition of emigration and immigration, an effective ban on private travel abroad, and pervasive bureaucratic controls on internal migration. This article outlines this Soviet package of migration controls and assesses its historical and international distinctiveness... |
2012 |
| Hiroshi Motomura |
Who Belongs?: Immigration Outside the Law and the Idea of Americans in Waiting |
2 UC Irvine Law Review 359 (February, 2012) |
I. Borders, Equality, and Integration. 361 A. Plyler v. Doe. 361 B. Borders Versus Equality. 363 C. Reconciling Borders with Equality. 365 D. The Role of Integration. 365 II. Immigration, Citizenship, Race, and Integration. 368 A. The Burdens of History. 368 B. The Cycle of Skepticism. 371 III. Integration and Immigration Outside the Law. 373 A.... |
2012 |
| Rick Su |
Working on Immigration: Three Models of Labor and Employment Regulation |
51 Washburn Law Journal 331 (Spring 2012) |
The desire to tailor our immigration system to the economic interests of our nation is as old as its founding. Yet after more than two centuries of regulatory tinkering, we seem no closer to finding the right balance. Contemporary observers largely ascribe this failure to conflicts over immigration, from disagreements about its economic impact to... |
2012 |
| Violeta R. Chapin |
¡Silencio! Undocumented Immigrant Witnesses and the Right to Silence |
17 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 119 (Fall 2011) |
At a time referred to as an unprecedented era of immigration enforcement, undocumented immigrants who have the misfortune to witness a crime in this country face a terrible decision. Calling the police to report that crime will likely lead to questions that reveal a witness's immigration status, resulting in detention and deportation for the... |
2011 |
| Scott Titshaw |
A Modest Proposal to Deport the Children of Gay Citizens, & Etc.: Immigration Law, the Defense of Marriage Act and the Children of Same-sex Couples |
25 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 407 (Winter, 2011) |
The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA), which defines the terms marriage and spouse for federal purposes, clearly prevents the recognition of same-sex spouses under U.S. immigration law. Unless judges and immigration officials are careful to limit it as Congress intended, DOMA might also have a tragic unintended effect on some parent-child... |
2011 |
| Berta Esperanza Hernández-Truyol |
A Need for Culture Change: Glbt Latinas/os and Immigration |
6 FIU Law Review 269 (Spring, 2011) |
In conversations about Latina/o immigration, such as the one that took place at LLEADS #2: The U.S. Immigration Crises: Enemies at Our Gates or Lady Liberty's Huddled Masses?, there is one issue that we tend not to address. There exists a Latina/o immigration cuento normativo (normative narrative) that obscures and denies an entire group of... |
2011 |