Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
Yung-hua Kuo |
FROM VULNERABILITY TO RESILIENCE: DISASTER RECOVERY LAWS AND INDIGENOUS ADAPTIVE STRATEGIES IN TAIWAN |
24 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 1 (Spring, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 2 II. Legal History of Indigenous Peoples in Taiwan. 8 A. Precolonial Era (- the Seventeenth Century). 8 B. The Qing Era (1683 - 1895). 10 C. Japanese-Ruled Period (1895 - 1945). 12 D. Republic of China Assimilation and Relocation Policy (1945 - 1987). 15 E. Indigenous Movements and Reclaiming Rights (1987 - Present). 18 III.... |
2023 |
Robert Costello |
FRONT OF THE HOUSE, BACK OF THE HOUSE: RACE AND INEQUALITY IN THE LIVES OF RESTAURANT WORKERS BY ELI REVELLE YANO WILSON |
36-SUM Criminal Justice 39 (Summer, 2021) |
NYU Press, December 2020, 9781479800612 Eli Revelle Yano Wilson is an Assistant Professor of Sociology at the University of New Mexico, where his research interests include race and ethnicity, labor, immigration, and labor. His work shows how inequality is reproduced and challenged within workforces. Born and raised in Hawaii, Eli completed his... |
2021 |
Katherine Conway |
Fundamentally Unfair: Databases, Deportation, and the Crimmigrant Gang Member |
67 American University Law Review 269 (October, 2017) |
Provocative language painting immigrants as dangerous criminals and promises of increased immigration enforcement were cornerstones of Donald J. Trump's presidential candidacy. As president, he has maintained this rhetoric and made good on many of his promises by broadening the definition of criminal conduct for immigration enforcement purposes,... |
2017 |
Mary Holper |
GANG ACCUSATIONS: THE BEAST THAT BURDENS NONCITIZENS |
89 Brooklyn Law Review 119 (Fall, 2023) |
A teenager from El Salvador attends a high school that is populated mostly by Latine youth. He finds his friends in a group of boys. He gets into a scuffle with another boy. Little does he know, with each of these interactions, he has been accruing points in a database that tracks gang membership and affiliation. The friendships earn him two... |
2023 |
Deborah M. Weissman |
GENDER VIOLENCE AS LEGACY: TO IMAGINE NEW APPROACHES |
20 Hastings Race and Poverty Law Journal 55 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 55 Part I. Defining RJ/TJ and Identifying the Challenges. 58 A. Restorative Justice (RJ). 58 B. Transformative Justice (TJ). 59 Part II. From Carceral Responses to Addressing the Political Economy of IPV. 61 Part III. The Turn to History. 64 Part IV. Restorative and Transformative Justice: Matters of Praxis... |
2023 |
Deborah M. Weissman |
GENDER VIOLENCE AS LEGACY: TO IMAGINE NEW APPROACHES |
34 Hastings Journal on Gender and the Law 55 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 55 Part I. Defining RJ/TJ and Identifying the Challenges. 58 A. Restorative Justice (RJ). 58 B. Transformative Justice (TJ). 59 Part II. From Carceral Responses to Addressing the Political Economy of IPV. 61 Part III. The Turn to History. 64 Part IV. Restorative and Transformative Justice: Matters of Praxis... |
2023 |
Pooja R. Dadhania |
GENDER-BASED RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION |
107 Minnesota Law Review 1563 (April, 2023) |
Asylum law fails to protect women and girls fleeing gender-based violence that occurs in the home or the private sphere. Gender-based violence survivors who are persecuted in the private sphere currently must undertake legal gymnastics to fit their claims within the purview of U.S. asylum law. This Article reframes gender-based violence as... |
2023 |
Pooja Gehi |
Gendered (In)security: Migration and Criminalization in the Security State |
35 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 357 (Summer 2012) |
Introduction I. Criminalization of Transgender Immigrants of Color. 364 A. Cycles of Poverty. 366 B. Walking While Trans: Police Profiling and Fourth Amendment Stops. 368 C. Disproportionate Incarceration. 372 D. Violence and Incarceration. 374 E. Criminal Procedure, Plea Bargains, and Safety. 375 II. Devolution of Criminal and Immigration Law. 377... |
2012 |
Olivia Salcido, Cecilia Menjívar |
Gendered Paths to Legal Citizenship: the Case of Latin-american Immigrants in Phoenix, Arizona |
46 Law and Society Review 335 (June, 2012) |
In this paper we seek to contribute to a greater understanding of legal citizenship by exploring the gendered experiences of Latin-American-origin immigrants in the greater Phoenix metropolitan area as they go through the legalization process. To explore this gendered angle we rely on in-depth interviews conducted from 1998 through 2008 with women... |
2012 |
Trina Jones , Jessica L. Roberts |
Genetic Race? Dna Ancestry Tests, Racial Identity, and the Law |
120 Columbia Law Review 1929 (November, 2020) |
Can genetic tests determine race? Americans are fascinated with DNA ancestry testing services like 23andMe and AncestryDNA. Indeed, in recent years, some people have changed their racial identity based upon DNA ancestry tests and have sought to use test results in lawsuits and for other strategic purposes. Courts may be similarly tempted to use... |
2020 |
Claire Lisker |
GEOGRAPHIC AND LINGUISTIC BELONGING: A PREREQUISITE FOR FULL CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS |
39 Chicana/o-Latina/o Law Review 183 (2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 184 I. Geographic Belonging. 190 A. The Ethno-Racialized Conception of U.S. Territorial Sovereignty - A Brief History. 190 B. Modern Territorial Sovereignty: Patrolling the Border. 192 II. Linguistic Belonging. 198 A. Jury Exclusions. 199 B. English-Only Rules and Inadequate Title VII and Title VI... |
2023 |
Valeria Gomez |
GEOGRAPHY AS DUE PROCESS IN IMMIGRATION COURT |
2023 Wisconsin Law Review 1 (2023) |
Even when limited by the plenary power doctrine, noncitizen respondents in removal proceedings are entitled to due process before immigration courts. At its core, due process in immigration court requires fundamental fairness--the opportunity to be heard and to mount a defense to deportation. Implicit in this right is the ability to access the... |
2023 |
Juliet P. Stumpf |
Getting to Work: Why Nobody Cares about E-verify (And Why They Should) |
2 UC Irvine Law Review 381 (February, 2012) |
Employment is traditionally conceptualized as a private contract between employer and employee. The Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA), which prohibited employers from knowingly hiring employees not authorized to work and required employers to request evidence of work authorization, introduced the government into this private... |
2012 |
Ruben J. Garcia |
Ghost Workers in an Interconnected World: Going Beyond the Dichotomies of Domestic Immigration and Labor Laws |
36 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 737 (Summer 2003) |
Beginning with the September 11, 2001 (9/11) terrorist attacks, the labor movement's plans to organize immigrant workers and achieve immigration reform have met serious challenges. After 9/11, the political climate surrounding immigrants put the AFL-CIO's hopes for legislative reform on hold, because of socially perceived connections between... |
2003 |
Kari Hong |
Gideon: Public Law Safeguard, Not a Criminal Procedural Right |
51 University of the Pacific Law Review 741 (2020) |
C1-2Table of Contents Table of Contents. 741 I. The Zig and Zags that Birthed and Confined the Right of Counsel to the Sixth Amendment. 746 A. From Powell v. Alabama to Argersinger: The (False) Narrative Confining the Right of Counsel to the Sixth Amendment. 746 B. Gideon's Foundation: The Right of Counsel as a Remedy to Asymmetry in All Public Law... |
2020 |
Nicholas Warren |
GINGLES UNRAVELED: HISPANIC VOTING COHESION IN SOUTH FLORIDA |
2 North Carolina Civil Rights Law Review 1 (Spring, 2022) |
The Voting Rights Act protects the ability of racial and language minority groups to elect candidates of choice by prohibiting states and localities from diluting those groups' votes when drawing electoral districts. e Fair Districts provisions of the Florida Constitution include a similar ban on vote dilution, plus further protections against... |
2022 |
Farrah G. De Leon |
Girding the Nation's Armor: the Appropriate Use of Immigration Law to Combat Terrorism |
3 Regent Journal of International Law 115 (2005) |
Three years after the tragic September 11, 2001, attacks, it is tempting to believe that America has returned to a time of normalcy. Yet, few would dispute that the nation is engaged in an ongoing War on Terror. September 11 has forever changed America, triggering a war that is affecting the everyday lives of Americans. This nation now realizes... |
2005 |
Matthew N. Greller |
Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Fastball Pitchers Yearning for Strike Three: How Baseball Diplomacy Can Revitalize Major League Baseball and United States-cuba Relations |
14 American University International Law Review 1647 (Fall 1999) |
INTRODUCTION. 1648 I. THE BASE-PATH: HOW UNITED STATES IMMIGRATION LAWS AND MLB RULES INTERACT TO ALLOW FOREIGN BASEBALL PLAYERS TO COMPETE IN THE UNITED STATES. 1655 A. The O Visa Category. 1656 B. The P Visa Category. 1659 C. The MLB Category. 1661 II. LA MANERA CUBANA -- THE CUBAN WAY -- HOW CUBAN PLAYERS COME TO THE UNITED STATES. 1666... |
1999 |
Gilbert Alexander Cotto-Lazo |
GIVE ME YOUR TIRED, YOUR POOR, YOUR HUDDLED MASSES: AN OVERVIEW OF THE IMMIGRATION SYSTEM AND CHEVRON DEFERENCE |
99 Oregon Law Review 419 (2021) |
Introduction. 420 I. History and Current Structure of U.S. Immigration System. 422 A. The United States' Backyard: A Backdrop of U.S. Policy Toward Latin America. 422 B. U.S. Immigration History and Current Structure. 424 C. Refugee Definition and Asylum Procedure. 426 D. Erosion of Procedural Protections for Asylees. 428 1. Expedited Removal. 428... |
2021 |
Logan Bushell |
Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Huddled Masses--just as Long as They Fit the Heteronormative Ideal: U.s. Immigration Law's Exclusionary & Inequitable Treatment of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgendered, and Queer Migrants |
48 Gonzaga Law Review 673 (2012-2013) |
I. Introduction. 674 II. Immigration & Sexuality: An Historical Analysis of Regulating Sexuality at the Border. 677 A. 1875-1917: Establishing a Foundational Blueprint for Exclusion of LGBTQ Migrants. 678 B. 1917-1990: Adherence to the Blueprint for Exclusion of LGBTQ Migrants. 680 III. Refuge in the Courthouse? The Judiciary's Approach to... |
2013 |
Dana Gayeski |
Give Me Your Tired, Your Poor, Your Legal: Why Efforts to Repeal Birthright Citizenship Are Unconstitutional and Un-american |
21 Temple Political & Civil Rights Law Review 215 (Fall 2011) |
In April 2010, Arizona signed into law the toughest immigration enforcement legislation in the nation, recharging the national debate over illegal immigration and pushing it to the forefront of American politics. Though the most controversial provisions of the Arizona law, Senate Bill 1070 (SB1070), were enjoined by the federal government, Arizona... |
2011 |
Nathalie Martin |
Giving Credit Where Credit Is Due: What We Can Learn from the Banking and Credit Habits of Undocumented Immigrants |
2015 Michigan State Law Review 989 (2015) |
Undocumented immigrants currently make up more than 5% of the U.S. labor force and 7% of school-age children. Numbering over eleven million, undocumented immigrants unquestionably comprise a significant segment of the population, yet most lack financial security and stability on multiple fronts. In addition to the everyday risk of deportation, many... |
2015 |
Elie Peltz |
GIVING VOICE TO THE SILENCED: THE POWER ACT AS A LEGISLATIVE REMEDY TO THE FEARS FACING UNDOCUMENTED EMPLOYEES EXERCISING THEIR WORKPLACE RIGHTS |
54 Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems 503 (Spring, 2021) |
Undocumented workers in the United States number nearly eight million and are key contributors to major industries and regional economies across the country. Yet undocumented workers often hesitate to report labor law violations due to the fear of making themselves known to immigration authorities. In recent years, employers have felt emboldened to... |
2021 |
Emily Gleichert |
Global Apathy and the Need for a New, Cooperative International Refugee Response |
16 Northwestern Journal of Law & Social Policy 119 (Fall, 2020) |
While an increasing number of nations move toward isolationist, nationalist policies, the number of refugees worldwide is climbing to its highest levels since World War II. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is the international body tasked with protecting this population. However, the office's traditional solutions for... |
2020 |
Pantea Javidan |
Global Class and the Commercial-sexual Exploitation of Children: Toward a Multidimensional Understanding |
1 Columbia Journal of Race and Law 365 (July, 2012) |
This Essay draws together several focal points of the Third Annual National People of Color Conference in 2010, human trafficking, racial contexts, criminal law, immigration law and international law, while addressing the core theme of post-racialism and other posts. The purpose of this Essay is three-fold. First, it challenges the notion that we... |
2012 |
Nez̆a Kogovs̆ek S̆alamon, Barry Frett, Elizabeth Stark Ketchum |
Global CrImmigration Trends |
81 IUS Gentium Gentium 3 (2020) |
Abstract Crimmigration, generally defined, is the increased entanglement of criminal and immigration procedures. Scholars have been observing this trend in the United States, Australia, and various European countries, as well as on other continents. Historically, states handled immigration infractions through civil or administrative systems... |
2020 |
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. 549 II. IMMIGRATION IN THE UNITED STATES. 552 III. HUMAN RIGHTS LAW. 563 IV. INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS. 568 A. Nondiscrimination Protections Under International Human Rights Norms. 570 1. Classifications Based on Race, Ethnicity, or National Origin. 570 2. Classifications Based on Sex. 572 3. The Status of Children in... |
1998 |
Evelyn H. Cruz , Robert J. McWhirter |
G-men Run Amuck |
45-AUG Arizona Attorney 34 (July/August, 2009) |
Don't shoot, G-Men; don't shoot, G-Men! So cried gangster Machine Gun Kelly with hands up when the Feds arrested him in 1933--at least that's the version from The FBI Story with Jimmy Stewart. After that, every kid in America wanted to be a G-Man! Now, theoretically, every cop in America can enforce immigration law and be a G-Man... |
2009 |
Mary Romero |
Go after the Women: Mothers Against Illegal Aliens' Campaign Against Mexican Immigrant Women and Their Children |
83 Indiana Law Journal 1355 (Fall, 2008) |
Protect Our Children, Secure Our Borders! is the rallying cry adopted by Mothers Against Illegal Aliens (MAIA), an Arizona-based women's anti-immigration group founded by Michelle Dallacroce in January 2006. Like other race-based nativist groups emerging in the United States, MAIA targets immigrants as the reason for overcrowded and low-achieving... |
2008 |
Chelsea M. Baltes |
God and the Illegal Alien, United States Immigration Law and a Theology of Politics by Robert W. Heimburger |
32 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 237 (Winter, 2018) |
Robert W. Heimburger is Associate Chaplain with the Oxford Pastorate, Associate Researcher at the Fundación Universitaria Seminario Bíblico de Colombia, and Editor of IFES Word & World. Heimburger begins his book connecting to the reader on an emotional level with first-hand accounts of individual's unsuccessful attempts to illegally enter the... |
2018 |
Stella Burch Elias |
Good Reason to Believe: Widespread Constitutional Violations in the Course of Immigration Enforcement and the Case for Revisiting Lopez-mendoza |
2008 Wisconsin Law Review 1109 (2008) |
In 1984, the United States Supreme Court held in INS v. Lopez-Mendoza that the exclusionary rule does not ordinarily apply to respondents in immigration proceedings. However, the Court suggested that its opinion about the applicability of the exclusionary rule might change if constitutional violations by immigration officers became a widespread... |
2008 |
Allen Thomas O'Rourke |
Good Samaritans, Beware: the Sensenbrenner-king Bill and Assistance to Undocumented Migrants |
9 Harvard Latino Law Review 195 (Spring, 2006) |
The United States has always been an immigrant nation. From talented students and professionals to your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, migrants have, since the nation's birth, come from around the world seeking liberty and better fortunes. The nation has become very diverse by consequence, and in recent years, the... |
2006 |
Michael A. Olivas |
Governing Badly: Theory and Practice of Bad Ideas in College Decision Making |
87 Indiana Law Journal 951 (Summer, 2012) |
I. Legacy or Alumni Preference Admissions. 955 II. Linking State College Appropriations to Test Scores. 959 III. Program Discontinuance. 965 IV. Playing Immigration Cop. 973 Conclusion. 974 |
2012 |
Anil Kalhan, School of Law, Drexel University |
Governing Immigration Through Crime: a Reader. By Julie A. Dowling and Jonathan Xavier Inda. Stanford University Press, 2013. 320 Pp. $29.95 Paperback |
49 Law and Society Review 292 (March, 2015) |
In Governing Immigration Through Crime, Julie A. Dowling and Jonathan Xavier Inda present an important collection of essays examining different ways in which the lines between immigration control and criminal law enforcement in the United States have blurred over the past two decades. As they explain in their introduction, the volume considers how... |
2015 |
Ira S. Rubinstein , Bilyana Petkova |
Governing Privacy in the Datafied City |
47 Fordham Urban Law Journal 755 (June, 2020) |
Privacy--understood in terms of freedom from identification, surveillance, and profiling--is a precondition of the diversity and tolerance that define the urban experience. But with smart technologies eroding the anonymity of city sidewalks and streets, and turning them into surveilled spaces, are cities the first to get caught in the line of... |
2020 |
Mark L. Jones |
GRABBING THE BULL BY THE HORNS: JURISPRUDENTIAL, ETHICAL, AND OTHER LESSONS FOR LAWYERS AND LAW STUDENTS IN THE IMMIGRATION LABYRINTH AND BEYOND |
45 University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 381 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. The Role of Stories and the Myth of Theseus and the Minotaur. 388 II. The Myth of Theseus and the Minotaur and the Nature of Law in the Modern Nation-State. 392 A. Origin and Functions of Law. 393 1. Law in General. 393 2. Immigration Law. 399 B. Sources of Governmental Power and Law. 402 1. Law in General. 402 2.... |
2023 |
Leila Kawar |
Grappling with Global Migration: Judicial Predispositions, Regulatory Regimes, and International Law Systems |
51 Tulsa Law Review 435 (Winter 2016) |
BANKS MILLER, LINDA CAMP KEITH, & JENNIFER S. HOLMES, IMMIGRATION JUDGES AND U.S. ASYLUM POLICY (UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS 2015). PP. 248.HARDCOVER $ 69.95.. REBECCA HAMLIN, LET ME BE AREFUGEE: ADMINISTRATIVE JUSTICE AND THE POLITICS OF ASYLUM IN THE UNITED STATES, CANADA, AND AUSTRALIA (OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS 2014). PP. 248. PAPERBACK $... |
2016 |
Cristina M. Rodriguez |
Guest Workers and Integration: Toward a Theory of What Immigrants and Americans Owe One Another |
2007 University of Chicago Legal Forum 219 (2007) |
The presence of over eleven million unauthorized immigrants in the United States has generated a wide-ranging and charged debate in recent years over the need to overhaul our immigration laws. Among the suggested reforms, the most novel (for the United States) and controversial has been the proposal that we adopt a large-scale temporary worker... |
2007 |
Barry R. Chiswick |
Guidelines for the Reform of Immigration Policy |
36 University of Miami Law Review 893 (September, 1982) |
In proposing optimal immigration criteria for the United States, the author focuses on the economic consequences of immigration, including the labor-market productivity of immigrants and their impact on the native population. Current immigration policy, according to the author, emphasizes kinship with a United States citizen or resident alien as... |
1982 |
Jonathan Kwortek |
Guilty Beyond a Reasonable Vote: Challenging Felony Disenfranchisement under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act |
93 Southern California Law Review 849 (May, 2020) |
History is not the past. It is the present. We carry our history with us. We are our history. If we pretend otherwise, we are literally criminals. James Baldwin C1-2TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION. 850 I. BACKGROUND. 853 A. Felon Disenfranchisement: Historical Origins And Adoption in the United States. 853 1. Origins of Felon Voting Restrictions.... |
2020 |
Allie Karoline Sievers |
Gypsies, Tramps & Thieves: What Europe's Romanies Can Teach the United States about Crime-motivated Immigration Reform |
1 Penn State Journal of Law & International Affairs 97 (April, 2012) |
This comment proposes that the United States could learn a great deal about the dangers of extreme immigration policy-making by looking to the European states and their dealings with the Romani, specifically the French expulsions of the Romani in 2010. Through this lens, this comment analyzes flaws in the U.S.' crime-motivated immigration... |
2012 |
Alexis Boyd |
HAIR ME OUT: WHY DISCRIMINATION AGAINST BLACK HAIR IS RACE DISCRIMINATION UNDER TITLE VII |
31 American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law 75 (2023) |
I. Introduction. 77 II. Background. 80 A. Discrimination Against Black Hair in Context. 80 B. Is Hair Discrimination Race Discrimination?. 82 1. Federal Protection: Under Title VII, Employers Cannot Discriminate Against a Person Because of Their Race. 82 2. Federal Court Precedent: Traditionally, Race-Based Hair Discrimination is Not Recognized as... |
2023 |
Kerry A. Krzynowek |
Haitian Centers Council, Inc. V. Sale: Rejecting the Indefinite Detention of Hiv-infected Aliens |
11 Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy 541 (Spring, 1995) |
Since the first settlers arrived in this country, the United States has always been a melting pot of nationalities. The constant influx of aliens led the federal government to begin regulating who could enter the country, over a century ago. One resulting piece of legislation was the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA), which sets forth... |
1995 |
Juan C. Montes |
Haitian Interdiction on the High Seas: a U.s. Policy of Bias and Inconsistency |
5 Saint Thomas Law Review 557 (Spring, 1993) |
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! Inscription on the Statute of Liberty The luminous splendor of liberty and freedom that the Statue of Liberty symbolizes for many immigrants is... |
1993 |
Irwin P. Stotzky |
Haitian Refugees and the Rule of Law |
61 Guild Practitioner 151 (Summer, 2004) |
All of us in this country, except perhaps for Native Americans, are either immigrants or the children of immigrants. Our roots, our origins, of course, suggest both subtle and stark cultural differences in the ways we live, view the world, behave. As a nation, a community, we publicly celebrate these differences. Moreover, the fact that the United... |
2004 |
Gregory A. Loken , Lisa R. Babino |
Harboring, Sanctuary and the Crime of Charity under Federal Immigration Law |
28 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 119 (Winter, 1993) |
Maria, a graying, recently widowed woman of fifty-seven, knelt to say the rosary. No doubt she needed the spiritual strength it provided, for her house was full of destitute foreigners sent to her by her parish priest. Beside her was a man named Jesús, who joined in her prayer. According to the ancient forms, they would introduce each decade of... |
1993 |
James C. Hathaway |
Harmonizing for Whom? The Devaluation of Refugee Protection in the Era of European Economic Integration |
26 Cornell International Law Journal 719 (Symposium, 1993) |
The pursuit of enhanced economic integration within Europe poses a threat to both the substance and the processes of the international system of refugee protection. In substantive terms, European Community governments have seized upon the impending termination of immigration controls at intra-Community borders to demand enhanced security at the... |
1993 |
Sarah Bienkowski |
Has France Taken Assimilation Too Far? Muslim Beliefs, French National Values, and the June 27, 2008 Conseil D'état Decision on Mme M. |
11 Rutgers Journal of Law & Religion 437 (Spring, 2010) |
When people immigrate to a new country, they bring with them a variety of defining characteristics such as different languages, traditions, social norms, and religions that make up their respective identities. Some countries adopt a multiculturalist approach whereby the qualities that immigrants bring are embraced; however, other countries favoring... |
2010 |
Shirin Sinnar |
HATE CRIMES, TERRORISM, AND THE FRAMING OF WHITE SUPREMACIST VIOLENCE |
110 California Law Review 489 (April, 2022) |
Even before the assault on the Capitol on January 6, 2021, a rising chorus of policymakers and pundits had called for treating White supremacist violence as terrorism. After multiple mass shootings motivated by White supremacist ideology, commentators argued that the hate crime label failed to convey the political nature of the violence or... |
2022 |
Erik Bleich, Sylvia Al-Mateen |
HATE SPEECH AND THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS: IDEAS AND JUDICIAL DECISION-MAKING |
29 Michigan State International Law Review 179 (2021) |
The rise in racism, xenophobia, and other forms of stigmatization increasingly challenges European countries to draw an explicit line between legally protected free speech and prohibited hate speech. The European Court of Human Rights is the highest court responsible for defining this boundary for the forty-seven member states of the Council of... |
2021 |