AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Elizabeth Harnish-Nisly DEPARTMENT OF STATE v. MUÑOZ: EYES WIDE SHUT--OBLITERATING MARITAL LIBERTY INTERESTS BY PRETENDING THEY NEVER EXISTED 84 Maryland Law Review 977 (2025) In Department of State v. Muñoz, the Supreme Court considered a Fifth Amendment Due Process challenge. Sandra Muñoz, a U.S. citizen, alleged that her marital liberty interest was infringed without due process of law when her husband's visa application was denied with little explanation. Rather than deciding whether Muñoz received the process she... 2025
Anja Bossow DEPORTATION AS TORTURE 57 New York University Journal of International Law & Politics 323 (Spring, 2025) Deportation, as a practice, is currently only lightly regulated under international human rights law. The only conditional defenses that an individual possesses against deportation are the threat of torture or cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment by the receiving state or a breach of procedural norms in the making of the deportation decision.... 2025
Liane M. Jarvis Cooper DIGITAL SPEECH AND FUTURE PERSECUTION 25 Nevada Law Journal 291 (Spring, 2025) Digital dissidents are afraid. Yet, U.S. federal circuit courts have repeatedly upheld federal agency decisions denying asylum to such individuals. Why? This Article uncovers and examines courts' evidentiary and policy reasons for upholding these denials. The Article then proposes a more comprehensive approach to determining when digital... 2025
Glykeria Teji , Shira Wisotsky DIGNITY IN DETENTION: ADDRESSING GYNECOLOGICAL HEALTHCARE NEEDS OF PEOPLE DETAINED BY U.S. IMMIGRATION AUTHORITIES 34 Annals of Health Law and Life Sciences 177 (Spring, 2025) People who require gynecological and obstetric care and who are detained by U.S. federal immigration authorities face unique challenges. This article examines how the current legal and administrative landscape fails to hold those responsible for providing healthcare accountable, effectively blocking access to gynecological care, and, assuming no... 2025
Kate Aschenbrenner Rodriguez DISCRETIONARY (IN)JUSTICE CONTINUED: DISCRETION AS A TOOL TO DENY ASYLUM 31 Washington and Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice 1 (Spring, 2025) In 2012, I published an article entitled Discretionary (In)justice: The Exercise of Discretion in Claims for Asylum. At that time, I was concerned because of a pattern I had seen of adjudicators in individual cases denying applications for asylum not on the basis of statutory eligibility but instead in an exercise of the adjudicator's discretion.... 2025
Kate Aschenbrenner Rodriguez DISCRETIONARY (IN)JUSTICE EXPANDED: CATEGORICAL DENIALS OF ASYLUM 94 UMKC Law Review 73 (Fall, 2025) President Trump was once again elected to the presidency on November 6, 2024. He campaigned on an anti-immigrant, anti-asylum seeker platform based on lies and racist, inflammatory rhetoric calculated to play on systemic racism, bias and the fears of some of the public. He has promised to crack down on illegal immigration immediately, starting... 2025
Mary Holper DISCRETIONARY IMMIGRATION DETENTION 74 Duke Law Journal 961 (January, 2025) Immigration detainees challenging immigration judges' bond decisions are hitting a jurisdictional wall--federal courts are given license to ignore errors that immigration judges make in determining dangerousness and flight risk, because such decisions can be categorized as discretionary. This license comes from a 1996 amendment to the Immigration... 2025
Jonathan Feingold , Joshua Weishart DISCRIMINATORY CENSORSHIP LAWS 99 Tulane Law Review 585 (February, 2025) The summer of 2020 ignited global protests for racial justice. Across the United States, millions marched with a modest plea: that America reckon with its racism. For K-12 schools, this moment pushed local communities and district leaders to create more inclusive classrooms and curricula. Yet before the summer ended, America's antiracist turn... 2025
Jenny Kim DISHONORABLY CHARGED: RESCUING NONCITIZEN VETERANS FROM THE ""DECONSTITUTIONALIZED ZONE" 21 Stanford Journal of Civil Rights & Civil Liberties 258 (August, 2025) Veterans are being deported from the United States for criminal convictions they sustained decades ago, and the federal government is failing its mission to protect them. Draconian immigration laws tied to criminal convictions, a sustained uptick in immigration enforcement, and the elimination of a longstanding statutory provision protected by the... 2025
  DRIVER'S LICENSES FOR ALL: AN EVALUATION OF FLORIDA'S ANTI-IMMIGRATION BILL AND THE CASE FOR ALLOWING UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS TO OBTAIN DRIVER'S LICENSES 58 Suffolk University Law Review 189 (2025) A driver's license is fundamentally a tool of public safety. It requires that all drivers receive training, pass a driver's test, get their vision checked, and know the rules of the road. It also allows cars to get insured, providing more safety checks and resources. That's why everyone who needs to drive on our roads should be licensed. It means... 2025
Isaac Mamaysky EMPLOYEE SPEECH v. WORKPLACE VALUES: A DEFENSE OF AT-WILL EMPLOYMENT AND PRIVATE EMPLOYER REGULATION OF POLITICAL SPEECH 74 Duke Law Journal Online 161 (June, 2025) The public policy underlying at-will employment--and particularly our collective interest in freedom of choice in the employment relationship--weighs in favor of allowing employers to regulate their employees' political activities and thus align personnel decisions with organizational values. Beginning with an exploration of the laws that somewhat... 2025
Jamie Draper, Utrecht University, j.r.g.draper@uu.nl ENCLAVES FOR THE EXCLUDED 29 Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy 283 (January, 2025) In western liberal democracies, and especially in Europe, the politics of immigration is intertwined with the politics of integration. Approaches to integration vary across national contexts, but there are also significant points of convergence. One such point of convergence is the widely held view that immigrants have a duty to integrate in... 2025
Sarah E. Corsico EPISTEMIC INJUSTICE IN REMOVAL PROCEEDINGS: DISABILITY, DISABLEMENT, AND THE SUBJUGATION OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE U.S. IMMIGRATION SYSTEM 60 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 251 (Winter, 2025) C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 252 II. Immigration Court Proceedings. 260 A. Initiation & Evolution of an Immigration Proceeding. 261 B. Disability Protections. 264 1. Competency Hearings and the INA. 264 2. The ADA & Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act. 268 III. Epistemic Injustice in Removal Proceedings. 269 A. An Introduction to... 2025
Elizabeth A. Brown , Matthew M. Cummings EVERY STEP YOU TAKE: SECURING EMPLOYEES' LOCATION DATA PRIVACY 26 Minnesota Journal of Law, Science & Technology 1 (Spring, 2025) When companies have access to the location data of millions of smartphones with minimal regulation, what stops them from using such data to track their employees' location outside of traditional working hours and locations? This Article analyzes the legal risks that the growing commodification of location data poses to employees and the ease with... 2025
Jacqueline Marie Brown FACT-FINDING IS AN IMMIGRATION LAWYER'S JOB: THE IMPORTANCE OF WORKING ONE-ON-ONE WITH CLIENTS IN ASYLUM CASES 59 University of San Francisco Law Review 417 (2025) Often, the most crucial part of an asylum seeker's case, fact-finding, is delegated to legal assistants and paralegals. However, this Article shows why that is a serious mistake. Declaration writing and gathering country conditions evidence are essential parts of an asylum claim, and they are precisely the tasks that should be handled by an asylum... 2025
Verónica C. Gonzales FINE-TUNING LLMS: STRUCTURAL FLUENCY AND AUGMENTATION FOR THE GREAT AND POWERFUL WIZARD OF AI 25 Duke Law & Technology Review 116 (27-Jan-25) The civil legal tradition carries assumptions, biases, and attitudes rooted in racism and ideologies intended to protect the (im)balance of power. This moment in history offers new versions of the same challenges with the integration of artificial intelligence (AI) and large language models (LLMs) into legal frameworks, and those critiques are... 2025
E. Tendayi Achiume FOR WHOM IS INTERNATIONAL LAW? 41 American University International Law Review 1 (2025) I. PROLOGUE. 1 II. LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, THANKS, AND OUTLINE. 4 III. LOOKING TO THE TOP: RACIAL JUSTICE, REPARATIONS AND INTERNATIONAL LAW. 6 IV. LOOKING TO THE BOTTOM. 18 V. CONCLUSION. 22 2025
Hannah Corcoran FORGET IT, FLORIDA. IT'S CHINATOWN: THE RETURN OF IMMIGRANT LAND LAWS IN AMERICA 96 University of Colorado Law Review 811 (2025) So the story of man runs in a dreary circle, because he is not yet master of the earth that holds him. -- Will Durant The United States is currently in the midst of a rebirth of what scholars have traditionally dubbed Alien Land Laws (hereinafter Immigrant Land Laws). These laws generally aim to regulate real estate acquisition and... 2025
Elena Contreras Chavez, Erica De Sutter Summerville, Finn Johnson, G Koffink, Jakki Mattson, Ronald Mize, Joselyne Tellez-- Cardenas FROM FAIRY TALES TO FASCIST NIGHTMARES: COUNTERING RON DESANTIS' FLORIDA 16 University of Miami Race & Social Justice Law Review 41 (Fall, 2025) Original Digital Artwork by Joel Smith The recent spate of anti--woke, don't say gay, anti--trans, and anti-- immigrant legislation, led by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, puts the sunshine state in the unenviable position of serving as the nation's test case for Republicans' neofascist agendas. This paper explores the exclusionary, targeting, and... 2025
Bojan Perovic FROM STALEMATE TO SOLUTIONS: RETHINKING INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION THROUGH VULNERABILITY THEORY AND TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION 94 Mississippi Law Journal 923 (2025) Introduction. 925 I. Intercountry Adoption: Historical Overview and Contemporary Context. 927 A. Foundations of Intercountry Adoption. 927 B. Korean War and Shift to Developing Nations. 928 C. Increased Responsiveness to Global Crises. 930 D. The Shift Towards Market-Driven Practices and the Emergence of Legal and Ethical Challenges. 932 E. Global... 2025
Meg Keiser GENDER-BASED PERSECUTION, PROTECTION, AND PARTICULARITY: THE CASE FOR RETURNING TO ACOSTA 43 Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality 281 (Winter, 2025) Waiting for her chance in Mexico to cross the border into the United States, a Honduran woman, Karen Paz, remarked that [h]itting a woman for a man is as normal as eating a tortilla from a food stand on the way to work, referring to the high prevalence of gender-based and domestic violence in Honduras. Ms. Paz revealed a scar on her shoulder--the... 2025
Meg Keiser GENDER-BASED PERSECUTION, PROTECTION, AND PARTICULARITY: THE CASE FOR RETURNING TO ACOSTA 43 Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality 281 (Winter, 2025) Waiting for her chance in Mexico to cross the border into the United States, a Honduran woman, Karen Paz, remarked that [h]itting a woman for a man is as normal as eating a tortilla from a food stand on the way to work, referring to the high prevalence of gender-based and domestic violence in Honduras. Ms. Paz revealed a scar on her shoulder--the... 2025
Steven W. Bender GETTING THERE FROM HERE: REFLECTING ON COMPASSIONATE MIGRATION POLICY 32 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 87 (Fall, 2025) Perchance to Dream . --Michael A. Olivas Introduction I. Compassionate Immigration Values and Principles II. Compassionate Borderlands Policy III. Immigration Values and Policies Under Trump IV. The Road to Compassion in a Time of Trump Conclusion Having written about Latinx issues for more than three decades, with a focus on immigration policy for... 2025
Bo Yan J. Moran, JD GOLD RUSH ANTI-CHINESE RACISM: THE BIRTH OF SAN FRANCISCO'S HOUSING CRISIS 29 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review 123 (Winter, 2025) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 124 I. Anti-Chinese Immigrant Segregation in the Late 1800s to Early 1900s: A San Francisco Experience. 127 A. The First Big Wave of Chinese Immigration to San Francisco. 127 B. Property and Land Use Restrictions: A Proven Exclusionary Tool Against Asians. 129 C. Chinese Laundry Cases. 131 II. Exclusionary... 2025
Rita E. Kuckertz HIDDEN BARRIERS TO ENTRY: LANGUAGE INJUSTICE, NOTICE, AND THE IN ABSENTIA REMOVAL OF FAMILIES ON LA'S DEDICATED DOCKET 28 Harvard Latin American Law Review 193 (Spring, 2025) The Dedicated Docket is among the latest in a series of fast-tracked immigration adjudication systems. Enacted by President Biden in 2021, it was designed to process families' immigration cases within 300 days. Since its inception, advocates have repudiated the docket, reporting grave due process and transparency concerns. This Article supplements... 2025
Cristina Marila HIDDEN IN PLAIN SIGHT: JAPAN'S DYING LABOR FORCE AND THE HUMAN TRAFFICKING ISSUES THAT COME WITH IT 56 George Washington International Law Review 149 (2025) Japan's stringent immigration policies paired with an aging population have left the country with a high demand for laborers. The labor scarcity promotes serious human trafficking issues that will become increasingly detrimental and prevalent as Japan's population continues to fall, and the country's strict immigration restrictions exacerbate the... 2025
Claire S. Campuzano HI-HO, OFF TO WORK ASYLEES MUST GO: NEW YORK'S NEED TO FACILITATE MIGRANT WORK PERMITS 42 Hofstra Labor and Employment Law Journal 431 (Spring, 2025) To some, we have come full circle from the time of the first Thanksgiving. Native-born Americans are having their land and opportunities overrun with foreign invaders at a pace the people of this country cannot contain. Only these days, the invaders aren't pilgrims escaping from under the thumb of monarchs, but rather refugees fleeing homes... 2025
Tsion Gurmu , Nekessa Opoti HOMOPHOBIA IN AFRICA AND XENOPHOBIA IN THE UNITED STATES CREATE PERILOUS CONDITIONS FOR BLACK LGBTI MIGRANTS 50 Human Rights 18 (March, 2025) Respect African societies and their values. If you don't agree, let us just manage our society as we see fit. [Homosexuals] are disgusting. What sort of people are they? --Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni They're poisoning the blood of our country .. [Immigrants are] coming into our country from Africa, from Asia, all over the world. --U.S.... 2025
Katherine Drabiak HOW DISTORTING ASYLUM LAW AFFECTS HEALTH AND SAFETY AT THE BORDER 22 Indiana Health Law Review 215 (2025) In 2023, U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) reported a record 3.2 million encounters of foreign nationals attempting to illegally enter the border. Multiple stories in the media and even scholarly articles refer to this influx of foreign nationals as asylum seekers and families fleeing violence, persecution, and armed conflict. Examining... 2025
Katrina Zhu HOW DOES AN IMMIGRANT BECOME AN "AMERICAN"? EXCLUSION AND ASSIMILATION IN U.S. NATURALIZATION LAW 72 UCLA Law Review 298 (May, 2025) Ugly fears of unassimilated immigrants have persisted throughout American history, influencing immigration law for centuries. From Chinese exclusion in the late 1800s, to President Trump's Muslim ban in 2017, to his continued emphasis on securing our borders today, American history is rich with examples of exclusionary immigration policies. Though... 2025
Robert Knowles HOW LOCHNERISM ENDS 56 Seton Hall Law Review 65 (2025) The Roberts Court's aggressive push for deregulation--often called New Lochnerism--seems ascendant in constitutional jurisprudence. The Court has revived Lochner-era judicial activism--dismantling bases for agency power, constitutionalizing free-market principles via the First Amendment, and using novel interpretive doctrines to curb the reach of... 2025
Xuan W. Tay HOW NATIONAL NARRATIVES SHAPE THE SOVEREIGNTY OF NATION-STATES 46 University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 1037 (Summer, 2025) This Article is broadly about the relationship between narratives and international legal behavior. It is specifically about the relationship between narratives about the nation-state, and how individuals think about sovereignty. In the main discussion, I introduce a cross-disciplinary theory which brings into view the national narrative's role in... 2025
Abigail “Abby” Reinhard Greene HOW THE UNITED STATES FAILS IMMIGRANT YOUTH 28 University of the District of Columbia Law Review 172 (Spring, 2025) Immigrants are some of the most marginalized members of society. Immigrant youth, in particular, endure additional stresses due to their dual status as children and immigrants. Many fled their home country from persecution or entered the U.S. without a parent or legal guardian. By May 2024, over 120 million individuals were forcibly displaced... 2025
Els De Busser HUMAN RIGHTS IN TECHNOLOGY--A NEED FOR A NEW NORM 57 Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 109 (Spring, 2025) The field of cyber security has relied on norms quite heavily to govern the behavior of states and non-state actors in cyberspace. However, existing norms do not offer guidance on integrating attention to human rights into the design and development of digital consumer products. This Paper introduces a way to foresee the human rights impact of new... 2025
Ron Hayduk IMMIGRANT VOTING RIGHTS AND THE QUEST FOR UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE 60 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 317 (Winter, 2025) C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 317 I. Should Noncitizens Have the Vote Too?. 323 A. The Rise and Fall of Alien Suffrage in American History. 324 B. Contemporary Campaigns to Restore Immigrant Voting Rights. 332 C. Right-wing Responses. 334 D. The Quest for Universal Suffrage. 338 Conclusion. 342 2025
Charis E. Kubrin, Graham C. Ousey IMMIGRATION AND CRIME IN COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE: AN EMERGING FRAMEWORK FOR RESEARCH 54 Crime and Justice 257 (2025) Research on immigration and crime has experienced unprecedented growth. Studies reveal that immigration is not associated with increased crime rates in many countries including the United States, Canada, and Australia. In other places such as Europe, the findings are more mixed. Yet, limitations in this body of work hamper our understanding. In... 2025
Stella Burch Elias IMMIGRATION FEDERALISM IN THE SECOND TRUMP ADMINISTRATION 61 Idaho Law Review 291 (2025) This Article explores the ongoing transformation of state and local engagement in immigration-related rulemaking in the United States during the Second Trump Administration. The Article examines the myriad ways in which federal executive actions and state responses to those actions, alongside independent state actions and the federal government's... 2025
Matthew Vogel IMMIGRATION INTERFERENCE: HOW IMMIGRATION LAW CREATES A SHADOW CRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM 47 University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 611 (Summer, 2025) With the Trump Administration's war on immigrants ostensibly focusing, at the time of this writing, on criminal aliens, the intersection of criminal law and immigration law is more fraught than ever. In this climate, César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández's recent book Welcome the Wretched: In Defense of the Criminal Alien, is timely. There, García... 2025
Jill E. Family IMMIGRATION LAW AFTER CHEVRON'S DEMISE 104 Oregon Law Review 75 (2025) Abstract. 76 Introduction. 77 I. The Implementation of Immigration Law Raises Humanitarian Concerns. 79 A. The Immigration Agencies and Liberty. 79 B. The Dysfunctional Immigration System. 85 II. The Move from Chevron to Loper Bright. 89 A. Court Deference to Agency Legal Conclusions: A Short History. 89 B. Skidmore and Immigration Statutes During... 2025
Megan Niemitalo IMMIGRATION, FEDERALISM, AND THE INVASION CLAUSES: WHO HAS A SEAT AT THE TABLE IN DISPUTES OVER THE STATE POWER TO REPEL "IMMIGRANT INVADERS" 110 Minnesota Law Review 1015 (December, 2025) In Arizona v. United States, the Supreme Court famously invalidated an Arizona statute that criminalized immigration violations and empowered state officials to enforce immigration law. Arizona seemed to settle the issue of whether states can regulate immigration for the following decade. In the last year, however, questions around the division of... 2025
Deenesh Sohoni, Vivian Eulalia Hamilton, Chinua Thelwell IN THROUGH THE SIDE DOOR: ANTI-ASIAN NATIVISM, U.S. IMMIGRATION, AND FOREIGN POLICY--A LEGAL HISTORY AND CASE STUDY 64 Washburn Law Journal 249 (Winter, 2025) The 19- and early 20-centuries were marked by pervasive anti-Asian sentiment, and antipathy towards people of color more generally. Giving legal effect to the anti-Asian nativism prevalent at the time, U.S. policies prohibited most Asian immigration and naturalization. In particular, immigration laws sought to exclude Asian laborers and... 2025
David Korostyshevsky , Instructor, Department of History, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80524, USA, Email: david.korostyshevsky@colostate.edu INCAPABLE OF MANAGING HIS ESTATE: HABITUAL DRUNKARDS AND THE EXPANSION OF GUARDIANSHIP IN THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY UNITED STATES 43 Law and History Review 795 (November, 2025) During the first half of the nineteenth century, Mid-Atlantic States expanded guardianship to include habitual drunkards. Legislators in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey empowered courts to put habitual drunkards under guardianship, a legal status that stripped them of their rights to own property, enter into contracts, make wills, and, in... 2025
David Korostyshevsky , Instructor, Department of History, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80524, USA, Email: david.korostyshevsky@colostate.edu INCAPABLE OF MANAGING HIS ESTATE: HABITUAL DRUNKARDS AND THE EXPANSION OF GUARDIANSHIP IN THE NINETEENTH-CENTURY UNITED STATES 43 Law and History Review 795 (November, 2025) During the first half of the nineteenth century, Mid-Atlantic States expanded guardianship to include habitual drunkards. Legislators in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey empowered courts to put habitual drunkards under guardianship, a legal status that stripped them of their rights to own property, enter into contracts, make wills, and, in... 2025
Julian M. Hill INTEGRATING HEALING JUSTICE INTO WORKER COOPERATIVE COUNSELING 52 Fordham Urban Law Journal 881 (April, 2025) Unaddressed trauma among workers negatively impacts their experience in the workplace, including the cooperative workplace. While lawyers who counsel worker cooperatives may develop conflict resolution tools, they far less commonly provide resources for responding to worker trauma that can, and often does, lead to conflict in the first place.... 2025
John D. Bessler INTERNATIONAL ABOLITIONIST ADVOCACY: THE RISE OF GLOBAL NETWORKS TO ADVANCE HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE PROMISE OF THE WORLDWIDE CAMPAIGN TO ABOLISH CAPITAL PUNISHMENT 34 Minnesota Journal of International Law 1 (Spring, 2025) The modern international human rights movement began with the U.N. Charter and the U.N. General Assembly's adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Although the movement to abolish the death penalty is rooted in the Enlightenment, global advocacy to halt executions and to abolish capital punishment has accelerated exponentially in... 2025
Xueying (Cathy) Zeng INVISIBLE LABOR, INVISIBLE RIGHTS: AN INTERSECTIONAL ANALYSIS ON THE UNITED STATES' AU PAIR PROGRAM 45 Columbia Journal of Gender and Law 340 (2025) Immigrant women of color have long formed the backbone of the American domestic workforce, and in the past few decades, they have been increasingly stepping in to fill the country's deepening childcare crisis. While scholars have examined the racialized, gendered, and classed dimensions of domestic labor and the transnational global nanny chain,... 2025
Anita L. Allen , Christopher Muhawe IS PRIVACY REALLY A CIVIL RIGHT? 40 Berkeley Technology Law Journal 1 (2025) Sixty years ago, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Civil rights laws aimed at curbing discrimination and inequality in federal programs, public accommodations, housing, employment, education, voting and lending faced opposition before the Act and continue to do so today. Nevertheless, a swell of legal scholars, policy... 2025
Jose Atiles, Department of Sociology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA, Email: jatiles@illinois.edu ISLANDS OF SOVEREIGNTY: HAITIAN MIGRATION AND THE BORDERS OF EMPIRE. BY JEFFREY KAHN. CHICAGO: CHICAGO UNIVERSITY PRESS, 2019 59 Law and Society Review 217 (March, 2025) In a time when mass deportations are framed as sound migration policy and Haitian communities become focal points in racialized political debates in the United States, and Haiti endures a prolonged multilayered humanitarian, political, and economic crisis, Jeffrey Kahn's Islands of Sovereignty: Haitian Migration and the Borders of Empire (2019)... 2025
Catherine L. Fisk JEWISH LAWYERS AND THE LABOR MOVEMENT 93 Fordham Law Review 1159 (March, 2025) Introduction. 1159 I. The Attractions of Labor Radicalism. 1161 A. Strangers in America Became Social Critics and Then Socialists. 1161 B. Radicalized by Events. 1165 C. Attractions of Law. 1166 D. A National Stage. 1167 E. Rebellion Against Family and Conventionality. 1169 II. What Pushed Lawyers into Union Work?. 1170 A. Racism and Antisemitism.... 2025
Chance J. Harper LEGISLATING MORALITY: THE HISTORICAL CONSEQUENCES OF THE MANN ACT ON THE AMERICAN PUBLIC 25 Wyoming Law Review 433 (2025) I. Introduction. 434 II. Background. 436 A. The Resurgency of Christian Culture in Law and Society. 437 III. Commerce Power. 440 A. Transportation of Others as Commerce. 442 B. Other Vices in Commerce. 445 IV. Moralizing Commerce through Hoke and Wilson. 447 V. Immoral Acts. 449 A. Expansion of Persecuted Acts. 450 B. Opposition to the Expansion.... 2025
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