Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
William J. Aceves ; Paul L. Hoffman |
Using Immigration Law to Protect Human Rights: a Legislative Proposal |
20 Michigan Journal of International Law 657 (Summer 1999) |
Introduction. 658 I. The Legislative History Of The Nazi Persecution And Genocide Provisions. 662 II. A Review Of The Nazi Persecution And Genocide Provisions. 669 A. Ineligibility for Admission. 669 B. Preclusion from Waiver of Inadmissibility. 670 C. Denaturalization. 671 D. Deportation. 672 E. Ineligibility for Withholding of Removal on Grounds... |
1999 |
Saby Ghoshray |
Using Unfair Competition Law to Deter Undocumented Immigration: Examining the Broader Implications of Recent California Litigation |
29 Campbell Law Review 233 (Winter 2007) |
Stained fingers and sunburned skin have destroyed his youthful appearance. Juan's stocky five-foot frame appears much older than that of a man in his mid-twenties. He used to enjoy the glistening southwestern sun, but now the California rays have become his nemesis. The boss man sits comfortably in his air-conditioned 4 x 4. Pick faster, you're... |
2007 |
Haylee R. Bunner |
VAGUE MADE VOGUE: THE UNCONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE PARTICULARLY SERIOUS CRIME BAR |
54 Columbia Human Rights Law Review 999 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 1002 I. The Evolution of the Particularly Serious Crime Bar and the Void for Vagueness Doctrine. 1006 A. The Current State of the Particularly Serious Crime Bar. 1006 1. Evolution of the Particularly Serious Crime Bar. 1008 2. Adjudicatory Evolution of the Particularly Serious Crime Bar Post-IIRIRA. 1019 B. The... |
2023 |
Sarah M. Wood |
Vawa's Unfinished Business: the Immigrant Women Who Fall Through the Cracks |
11 Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy 141 (Spring 2004) |
Domestic violence is a crime that does not recognize racial, cultural, or socioeconomic barriers. Between 1992 and 1996, there were an average of 960,000 incidents of violence between partners in an intimate relationship per year; most of these victims were women. The case of the Latin American immigrant community is examined later in Part IV of... |
2004 |
Nathan Virag, Esq. |
VBF GRANTEE SPOTLIGHT: THE ASSOCIATION OF AFRICANS LIVING IN VERMONT |
48-WTR Vermont Bar Journal 40 (Winter, 2023) |
The Association of Africans Living in Vermont (AALV) is a nonprofit organization in Burlington that provides various free services to refugees and new Americans. The mission of the organization is to promote equal opportunity, dignity, and self-sufficiency for all refugee and immigrant individuals and families in Vermont. The AALV provides are... |
2023 |
Jamie Rowen, Scott Blinder, Rebecca Hamlin , Department of Legal Studies and Political Science, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts, USA |
VICTIM, PERPETRATOR, NEITHER: ATTITUDES ON DESERVINGNESS AND CULPABILITY IN IMMIGRATION LAW |
56 Law and Society Review 369 (September, 2022) |
This study examines whether there is popular support for a restrictive immigration policy aimed at denying safe haven to human rights abusers and those affiliated with terrorism. We designed a public opinion survey experiment that asks respondents to evaluate whether low level or high-level Taliban members who otherwise qualify for refugee status... |
2022 |
Kavitha Sreeharsha |
Victims' Rights Unraveling: the Impact of Local Immigration Enforcement Policies on the Violence Against Women Act |
11 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 649 (2010) |
I. Background. 651 A. Local Enforcement of Immigration Law. 651 1. The 287(g) Program. 651 2. The Secure Communities Program. 655 3. Criminal Alien Program (CAP). 656 4. State and Local Anti-Immigration Laws. 657 B. Immigrant Victims. 658 1. VAWA: Law Enforcement and Domestic Violence. 658 2. Immigration Relief Under the Violence Against Women Act.... |
2010 |
Bill Ong Hing |
Vigilante Racism: the De-americanization of Immigrant America |
7 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 441 (Spring 2002) |
Ahmad Namrouti is giving up on America. It's just too difficult to be an Arab and live here, said the San Francisco grocer. I'm afraid, said the native of Jordan, who came here seven years ago to follow his dreams. I came here for freedom, to live here . . . for the good life . . . . At 59, Namrouti had just received his U.S. citizenship when... |
2002 |
James Duff Lyall |
Vigilante State: Reframing the Minuteman Project in American Politics and Culture |
23 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 257 (Winter, 2009) |
Last spring, this journal published an essay by Jim Gilchrist, co-founder of the Minuteman Project. In that essay, Gilchrist argues that an illegal alien invasion (undocumented immigration) is to blame for a host of social ills--from crime, unemployment, pollution, and disease to traffic gridlock, high tuition costs, poor health care, and... |
2009 |
Mary Romero, Marwah Serag |
Violation of Latino Civil Rights Resulting from Ins and Local Police's Use of Race, Culture and Class Profiling: the Case of the Chandler Roundup in Arizona |
52 Cleveland State Law Review 75 (2005) |
I. Overview of the Chandler Roundup. 81 II. Urban Policing Practices and Constructing Citizenship. 83 III. Micro and Macroaggressions and Immigration Law Enforcement. 85 IV. Citizenship Socialization and Immigration Control. 91 V. Conclusion. 95 |
2005 |
Michael J. Nunez |
Violence at Our Border: Rights and Status of Immigrant Victims of Hate Crimes and Violence along the Border Between the United States and Mexico |
43 Hastings Law Journal 1573 (August, 1992) |
The bosom of America is open to receive not only the Opulent and respectable Stranger, but the oppressed and persecuted of all nations and religions, whom we shall welcome to a participation of all our rights and privileges . -George Washington, 1783 Hello, Beaners! Starting a war with the white man, down on Dairy Mart road? We will definitely... |
1992 |
Anna Henson |
VIRTUAL WHAC-A-MOLE: ADDRESSING THE PATCHWORK REGULATION OF ONLINE HATE SPEECH |
31 Michigan State International Law Review 115 (2023) |
This note will discuss hate speech, why it's dangerous, and how it can spread without being detected. This leads to the exploration of existing international, national, and company regulations regarding online hate speech, the identification of holes and inadequacies, and ultimately suggestions for moving forward in a digital age. The note... |
2023 |
Liz Bradley , Hillary Farber |
VIRTUALLY INCREDIBLE: RETHINKING DEFERENCE TO DEMEANOR WHEN ASSESSING CREDIBILITY IN ASYLUM CASES CONDUCTED BY VIDEO TELECONFERENCE |
36 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 515 (Winter, 2022) |
The COVID-19 pandemic forced courthouses around the country to shutter their doors to in-person hearings and embrace video teleconferencing (VTC), launching a technology proliferation within the U.S. legal system. Immigration courts have long been authorized to use VTC, but the pandemic prompted the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) to... |
2022 |
Rebecca Sharpless |
VIRUS AS FOREIGN INVADER: U.S. VOTERS & THE IMMIGRATION DEBATE |
75 University of Miami Law Review 547 (Winter, 2021) |
Nativist sentiments against classes of immigrants have existed since colonial times. But views about immigration and immigrants drive U.S. electoral politics now more than ever, accounting for a significant number of voters who crossed party lines in the 2016 presidential election. The COVID-19 pandemic has the potential to harden deeply-held... |
2021 |
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 |
Federica Dell'Orto, Judith Wood |
WAIVERS OF INADMISSIBILITY REQUIREMENTS AND THEIR IMPACT ON APPLICANTS FOR ADJUSTMENT OF STATUS |
2023 Federal Lawyer 10 (2023) |
Adjustment of status is the process of applying for lawful permanent residency in the United States, a process which allows transition from being a non-immigrant visa holder or a foreign national without status to lawful permanent residency. Adjusting status is an option available to only a few categories of people, amongst those: certain relatives... |
2023 |
Ashley Poonia |
We Are All Family: Broadening the Family-based Immigration System to Include Extended Family Members |
93 University of Detroit Mercy Law Review 159 (Winter 2016) |
The history of the United States is, in large, the history of immigrants. The three priorities that continue to govern the United States immigration system are skilled workers, family relationships, and refugee status. This Note will focus on the second priority: family relationships. Within the current immigration system, family relationships fall... |
2016 |
Duane Rudolph |
WE HAVE THE RIGHT TO PLAY |
26 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 369 (2023) |
Abstract. This article evaluates landmark cases spanning almost seven decades from the Supreme Court of the United States dealing with sexual orientation and gender identity. The cases are as follows: (1) One, Inc. v. Olesen (1958); (2) Boutilier v. Immigration and Naturalization Service (1967); (3) Baker v. Nelson (1972); (4) Rowland v. Mad River... |
2023 |
Jennifer Gordon |
We Make the Road by Walking: Immigrant Workers, the Workplace Project, and the Struggle for Social Change |
30 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 407 (Summer, 1995) |
Maria Luisa Paz, an undocumented woman who worked in a factory in her native Columbia, is employed by a commercial laundry, Sparrow Linens, together with 300 other workers from El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, and other Latin American countries. Their work consists of disinfecting, washing, pressing, and folding mounds of hospital linens. Paz's... |
1995 |
Gregory Ablavsky , W. Tanner Allread |
WE THE (NATIVE) PEOPLE?: HOW INDIGENOUS PEOPLES DEBATED THE U.S. CONSTITUTION |
123 Columbia Law Review 243 (March, 2023) |
The Constitution was written in the name of the People of the United States. And yet, many of the nation's actual people were excluded from the document's drafting and ratification based on race, gender, and class. But these groups were far from silent. A more inclusive constitutional history might capture marginalized communities' roles as... |
2023 |
L. Darnell Weeden |
We the People Should Extend Constitutional Protections to Undocumented Resident Immigrants Killed Unreasonably by the Police |
44 Thurgood Marshall Law Review 187 (Spring, 2020) |
This article will discuss whether an undocumented resident immigrant residing in a community in the United States is entitled to basic due process rights. A question for consideration is whether an undocumented resident immigrant living in a community in the United States can be denied a basic right against unreasonable searches and seizures in a... |
2020 |
Catherine Powell |
We the People: These United Divided States |
40 Cardozo Law Review 2685 (August, 2019) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 2687 I. Adapting Ely's Notion of Correcting Political Market Failure. 2697 A. Immigrants' Rights: The Problem of Minority Underrepresentation. 2698 B. Climate Policy: The Problem of Regulatory Capture by Influential Economic Minorities. 2703 C. Immigration and Climate Policies: Informational Asymmetries and... |
2019 |
Erin Griffard |
WEAKENING THE DEPORTATION PIPELINE BY ENCOURAGING LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES TO TERMINATE THEIR 287(G) AGREEMENTS: LOCAL STRATEGIES GROUNDED IN ADMINISTRATIVE AND MORAL IMPLICATIONS |
36 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 1087 (Spring, 2022) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 1088 II. Background on the 287(g) Program. 1089 A. Nuts and Bolts of 287(g) Agreements. 1089 B. Historical Background on 287(g) Agreements. 1093 1. 287(g) Agreements under the Trump Administration. 1094 2. 287(g) Agreements in the Biden Era. 1095 III. 287(g) Agreements Are Inherently Unjust, Ineffective, and... |
2022 |
Mitchell F. Crusto |
Weeding out Injustice: Amnesty for Pot Offenders |
47 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 367 (Spring, 2020) |
The legalization of marijuana raises a quintessential jurisprudential question: Whether such laws apply retroactively to exonerate past pot offenders. The answer to this question affects millions of Americans who are suffering from the negative effects of past pot-related offenses. Some such offenders are serving life sentences without the... |
2020 |
Patrick J. Charles |
Weighing the Constitutionality of State Immigration Verification Laws in the Wake of Arizona V. United States |
27 Journal of Civil Rights & Economic Development 441 (Winter, 2014) |
In the wake of Arizona v. United States, it is settled that state immigration verification laws like Section 2(B) are facially constitutional. At the same time, the Supreme Court did not foreclose that Section 2(B) could be preempted in terms of its application, nor did the Court shield the law from subsequent civil rights litigation. Thus, the... |
2014 |
Keith Aoki , John Shuford |
Welcome to Amerizona--immigrants Out!: Assessing "Dystopian Dreams" and "Usable Futures" of Immigration Reform, and Considering Whether "Immigration Regionalism" Is an Idea Whose Time Has Come |
38 Fordham Urban Law Journal L.J. 1 (November, 2010) |
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 |
Anna Williams Shavers |
Welcome to the Jungle: New Immigrants in the Meatpacking and Poultry Processing Industry |
5 Journal of Law, Economics & Policy 31 (Spring, 2009) |
I. Introduction. 31 II. Enter the Jungle: The Economics of Employing New Immigrants. 33 A. Immigration and the U.S. Workforce. 36 1. The Foreign-Born Workforce. 36 2. Black Americans and Immigration. 46 3. Taxes and Benefits. 48 B. The Meatpacking and Poultry Processing Industry. 52 1. The House of Swift. 52 2. The Changing Face of the Meatpacking... |
2009 |
Jennifer M. Pacella |
Welcoming the Unwanted: Italy's Response to the Immigration Phenomenon and European Union Involvement |
25 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 341 (Winter, 2011) |
In recent years, Italy has experienced a significant influx in the number of immigrants seeking to establish a new life in Europe. As a result, the nation is transforming from a traditionally homogenous society to one of varying races, religions, and backgrounds. As such a transformation occurs, anti-immigrant sentiment and xenophobia have surfaced... |
2011 |
Kostas A. Poulakidas |
Welfare Reform and Immigration: Attempting to Find a Domestic Answer to a Global Question |
6 Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies 283 (Fall, 1998) |
Globalization and interdependence have become common terms among legislators and policymakers. The growing global interrelationship of economies, politics, technology, communications, and societal values are daily confrontations for local policymakers. The nature of these shifts are beyond the control of any single individual, locality, or nation.... |
1998 |
Carol Wilson |
Well-founded Fear of Persecution-the Standard of Proof in Political Asylum Resolved, or Is It?: Ins V. Cardoza-fonseca |
22 University of San Francisco Law Review 385 (Winter/Spring, 1988) |
THE UNITED STATES HAS long been a haven for aliens seeking refuge from persecution. Since the turn of the century, the United States has enacted a variety of laws affecting the admission of refugees. Current law under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 (Act) provides two remedies for aliens seeking sanctuary in the United States. The... |
1988 |
Alberto J. Perez |
Wet Foot, Dry Foot, No Foot: the Recurring Controversy Between Cubans, Haitians, and the United States Immigration Policy |
28 Nova Law Review 437 (Winter 2004) |
I. Introduction. 437 II. Cuba and Emigration. 438 III. Haitian Emigration. 446 A. The Foundation of Haitian Emigration. 446 B. Laws Relating to Haitian Emigration. 450 IV. The Current Controversy Involving Cuban and Haitian Emigration. 454 V. Rational Basis Scrutiny as Applied to Alien Regulations and Their Constitutionality. 457 VI.... |
2004 |
Carrie Rosenbaum |
What (And Whom) State Marijuana Reformers Forgot: Crimmigration Law and Noncitizens |
9 DePaul Journal for Social Justice Just. 1 (Summer, 2016) |
Deportation rates of Latino/a noncitizens are higher than their presence in immigrant communities in the United States. The fact that Latino/a noncitizens experience immigration policing and deportation at higher rates than other noncitizens is due, at least in part, to federal immigration enforcement's use of alleged criminality to identify... |
2016 |
René K. Cousins |
What about Diversity? Historical Reappearance Proves to Be Stifling the Progress of a Diverse "Nation of Immigrants" |
7 Southern Region Black Law Students Association Law Journal 15 (Spring 2013) |
American history is rampant with exclusionary acts and promulgations. This note acknowledges the recurring aversion toward immigration, particularly illegal immigration in the United States. From its earliest days of development, America was a nation of immigrants. Some of the first settlers on American soil sought economic opportunity, relief from... |
2013 |
Tori DeLaney |
WHAT DO WE DO WITH YOU: HOW THE UNITED STATES USES RACIAL-GENDERED IMMIGRANT LABOR TO INFORM ITS IMMIGRANT INCLUSION-EXCLUSION CYCLE |
92 University of Cincinnati Law Review 206 (10/20/2023) |
The United States has constructed and continues to enforce gender, race, and labor assumptions through the Immigration and Nationality Act's (INA) deportation rules. The United States crafted its immigration laws to be flexible enough to lean on and vilify immigrant labor depending on the nation's labor needs. Modern enforcement of the INA's... |
2023 |
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 |
Sophia Brill , Senior Counsel to the Assistant Attorney General for National Security , National Security Division |
WHAT IS DOMESTIC TERRORISM AND WHY DOES THE DEFINITION MATTER? |
71 Department of Justice Journal of Federal Law and Practice 7 (August, 2023) |
In recent years, U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies have reported a steady rise in threats from domestic terrorists and domestic violent extremists. The number of Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) investigations of suspected domestic violent extremists more than doubled between 2020 and 2021, in large part due to the January 6, 2021... |
2023 |
Kelly McGee |
What's So Exceptional about Immigration and Family Law Exceptionalism? An Analysis of Canonical Family and Immigration Law as Reflective of American Nationalism |
20 Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law 699 (Symposium, 2019) |
Introduction 699 I. Immigration and Family Law Canon Intersect 701 II. Survived and Punished: A Corrective Lens 701 III. Immigration Law Exceptionalism 702 A. Family Unity Narratives 704 B. A Blurred Line: Family and Immigration Law 706 IV. Family Law Exceptionalism 707 A. The Failed Promise Of Parental Rights: Family Law Exceptionalism and the... |
2019 |
Hila Shamir |
What's the Border Got to Do with It? How Immigration Regimes Affect Familial Care Provision--a Comparative Analysis |
19 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 601 (2011) |
I. Introduction. 602 II. Importing Care. 607 A. Feminist Approaches to Paid In-Home Care Work. 608 B. Feminist Approaches to Migrant Care Work. 611 C. Legal Distributive Analysis of Care Work. 615 D. Given the informal character of care work what does legal analysis have to contribute to it?. 616 III. The State, the Family, and the Market: A Legal... |
2011 |
Sophie Kosmacher |
WHEN DOES QUESTIONING RELATED TO IMMIGRATION STATUS CONSTITUTE A MIRANDA INTERROGATION? |
69 UCLA Law Review Discourse 80 (2021) |
This Essay puts forward a two-element argument that noncitizen defendants can use to establish that they have been interrogated for Miranda purposes when they have been questioned about their immigration status by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officers. I examine the briefing and decision in one defendant's case to illustrate why this... |
2021 |
Huyen Pham |
When Immigration Borders Move |
61 Florida Law Review 1115 (December, 2009) |
With recent immigration enforcement efforts, we have created a completely new paradigm of moving borders: laws, enacted at all levels of government, that require proof of legal immigration status in order to obtain a driver's license, a job, rental housing, government need-based assistance, and numerous other essential benefits. Unlike the fixed... |
2009 |
Ange-Marie Hancock |
When Is Fear for One's Life Race-gendered? An Intersectional Analysis of the Bureau of Immigration Appeals's in re A-r-c-g- Decision |
83 Fordham Law Review 2977 (May, 2015) |
In August 2014, the U.S. Board of Immigration Appeals (BIA) handed down a breakthrough decision, In re A-R-C-G-, permitting courts to consider domestic violence as a gendered form of persecution in a home country and thus grounds for asylum in the United States. Along with two other 2014 decisions, In re W-G-R- and In re M-E-V-G-, this case... |
2015 |
Liav Orgad |
WHEN IS IMMIGRATION SELECTION DISCRIMINATORY? |
115 AJIL Unbound 345 (2021) |
Managing global migration is one of the most pressing issues of our time. Traditionally, international law has not generally regulated immigration and citizenship law; it defers to state authority in setting up rules and procedures for entry into the territory and citizenry. The lack of clear regulation--and a commonly accepted methodology on how... |
2021 |
Beth Lyon |
When More "Security" Equals less Workplace Safety: Reconsidering U.s. Laws That Disadvantage Unauthorized Workers |
6 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor and Employment Law 571 (Spring 2004) |
In the search for security, the United States is obscuring rights for low-income immigrant workers, and in so doing is sacrificing its own workplace safety. Poverty and unemployment all over the world drive millions of people to the United States in search of jobs, meeting strong employer demand for low-wage labor. As a result, the United States is... |
2004 |
Janet L. Dolgin , Katherine R. Dieterich |
When Others Get Too Close: Immigrants, Class, and the Health Care Debate |
19 Cornell Journal of Law & Public Policy 283 (Spring 2010) |
This Article describes one genre of contemporary anti-immigrant rhetoric, examines the social and economic forces that engender that rhetoric, and delineates its implications for the national debate about health care reform. The Article details the underlying significance of America's opaque, yet highly competitive, class system to immigration... |
2010 |
William Ortman |
When Plea Bargaining Became Normal |
100 Boston University Law Review 1435 (September, 2020) |
Plea bargaining is the criminal justice system, the Supreme Court tells us, but how did it get to be that way? Existing scholarship tells only part of the story. It demonstrates that plea bargaining emerged in the nineteenth century as a response to (depending on one's theory) increasing caseloads, expanding trial procedures, or professionalizing... |
2020 |
George Shepherd |
When Should a Person's Name Be Removed from a Monument? A Proposed Standard and its Application to the Yerkes National Primate Research Center |
51 University of Toledo Law Review 249 (Winter, 2020) |
A contentious issue is the conditions under which offensive monuments should be removed, and controversial names should be eliminated from buildings and organizations. I first develop a standard for determining when a monument or name should be removed. Then, as a case study, I examine whether Emory University should remove the name of Robert M.... |
2020 |
William R. Tamayo |
When the "Coloreds" Are Neither Black Nor Citizens: the United States Civil Rights Movement and Global Migration |
2 Asian Law Journal L.J. 1 (May 1, 1995) |
In this time of great national concern over the control of American borders and the legal and social status of immigrants, the traditional Civil Rights Movement is at a crucial stage. In this Article, the author finds that the Civil Rights Movement, which operates in a primarily Black v. white paradigm, is ill-equipped to deal with an... |
1995 |
Sarah Lamdan |
When Westlaw Fuels Ice Surveillance: Legal Ethics in the Era of Big Data Policing |
43 New York University Review of Law and Social Change 255 (2019) |
Legal research companies are selling surveillance data and services to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and other law enforcement agencies. This Article discusses ethical issues that arise when lawyers buy and use legal research services sold by the same vendors responsible for building ICE's surveillance systems. As the legal... |
2019 |
Vivian Chang |
Where Do We Go from Here: Plea Colloquy Warnings and Immigration Consequences Post-padilla |
45 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 189 (Fall 2011) |
Although deportation can sometimes represent a more serious consequence for a non-citizen defendant than some criminal sanctions, deportation has traditionally been viewed as a purely civil matter. This is well reflected in criminal law, where the threat of deportation has typically been categorized as a collateral consequence of criminal activity.... |
2011 |
Stephanie Groff |
Where to Draw the Line: the Egregiousness Standard in the Application of the Fourth Amendment in Immigration Proceedings and the Racial Profiling Exception |
26 George Mason University Civil Rights Law Journal 87 (Fall 2015) |
In the early morning of September 19, 2006, a large group of men gathered in Kennedy Park, Danbury, Connecticut, seeking work as day laborers. Unbeknownst to these individuals, the Danbury Police Department (DPD) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents began arriving at the park with the intention of carrying out a sting operation. The... |
2015 |