Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
Ryan Saunders |
OPTING OUT OF THE EXCEPTION: WASHINGTON'S OPPORTUNITY TO PROVIDE DUE PROCESS FOR DETAINED IMMIGRANTS |
22 Seattle Journal for Social Justice 155 (Fall, 2023) |
The Northwest Detention Center also known as NW ICE Processing Center in Tacoma, WA is one of the largest immigration prisons in the country, with a capacity to hold up to 1,975 immigrants. People end up in the detention center after being transferred from prisons in our state after ending their sentences, after being detained during immigration... |
2023 |
Hilda Loury |
PACHAMAMA OVER PEOPLE AND PROFIT: A CASE FOR INDIGENOUS ECOLOGY AND ENVIRONMENTAL PERSONHOOD |
47 American Indian Law Review 229 (2022-2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 229 I. The Environmental Crisis. 231 A. The Anthropocene. 231 B. Global Environmental Changes. 233 II. A Comparative Analysis of Indigenous and Western Ecology. 236 A. Prefaces. 236 B. Self, Other, and Nature. 237 C. Use and Consumption. 241 D. Cultural Priorities. 243 III. Law and Personhood. 246 A. U.S.... |
2023 |
Professor E. Tendayi Achiume |
PANDEMIC BORDERS AND RACIAL BORDERS: KEYNOTE DELIVERED AT THE 2020 ANNUAL SYMPOSIUM OF THE UCLA JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND FOREIGN AFFAIRS |
27 UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs 1 (Fall, 2023) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Beginning in the Past. 3 II. Considering the Present. 8 III. Race as a Territorial Border. 12 |
2023 |
Jessie K. Walker |
PAVING A NEW PATHWAY TO PERMANENT RESIDENCY: A CANADIAN-INSPIRED PROPOSAL FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS, UNDOCUMENTED IMMIGRANTS, AND THE UNITED STATES |
33 Indiana International & Comparative Law Review 323 (2023) |
Tim Chan's and Maggie Tong's plans to return to Hong Kong after graduation from their Canadian universities suddenly halted after the drastic changes in Hong Kong governance. Germainne Hein, an international student living with her husband in Arkansas, was denied the ability to receive in-state tuition despite her husband's permanent residency and... |
2023 |
Izabela Kraśnicka , Charles Szymanski |
POLISH RESPONSE TO THE WAR IN UKRAINE: THE PROTECTION OF REFUGEES |
73 Syracuse Law Review 503 (2023) |
The authors dedicate this article to all the Ukrainian refugees who have crossed the Polish border, fleeing the Russian invasion and seeking a safer place to live, and to all the individual Poles who have gladly made sacrifices to help them achieve this goal. C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 504 I. Response of Civil Society. 505 II. Response of... |
2023 |
Samanda Rodriguez |
POST-CONVICTION RELIEF AND EXPUNGEMENT PETITIONS--DOES EITHER OPTION PROVIDE RELIEF FOR UNDOCUMENTED PEOPLE FROM BEING DEPORTED? |
22 Appalachian Journal of Law 1 (2023) |
Keywords: Post-Conviction, Immigration, ICE Approximately 70 million people in the United States have a criminal record. In the United States, the total foreign-born population (documented and undocumented) hit 47 million in April of 2022. In the Fiscal Year of 2020, Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO) of the U.S. Immigration and Customs... |
2023 |
Rebecca L. Feldmann |
PREVENTING TRAFFICKING BY PROTECTING REFUGEES |
2023 Utah Law Review 659 (2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 660 I. The Duty to Prevent Human Trafficking. 666 A. Defining Human Trafficking: The Palermo Protocol and the TVPA. 666 B. The Challenge of Identifying Victims. 668 C. The 4P Paradigm and the Inherent Tension Underlying the Duty to Prevent Human Trafficking. 670 D. The Intersecting Roles of Racial and Gender... |
2023 |
Christopher Levesque , Kimberly Horner , Linus Chan |
PROCESS AS SUFFERING: HOW U.S. IMMIGRATION COURT PROCESS AND CULTURE PREVENT SUBSTANTIVE JUSTICE |
86 Albany Law Review 471 (2022-2023) |
In this article, we argue that there is a form of double punishment unique to the immigration court system that attorneys and their noncitizen clients must navigate throughout changing political contexts. The first form of punishment is the court process during removal proceedings, and the second form of punishment is removal from the United... |
2023 |
Kevin R. Johnson |
PROFESSOR RACHEL MORAN: A FOUNDATIONAL LATINA/O CIVIL RIGHTS SCHOLAR |
10 Texas A&M Law Review 749 (Summer, 2023) |
With an illustrious scholarly career, Professor Rachel Moran is a most-deserving Texas A&M University Hagler Fellow. Previously a chaired professor of law and dean of UCLA School of Law, and a chaired professor at the University of California, Berkeley School of Law, she currently is a Distinguished and Chancellor's Professor of Law at the... |
2023 |
William Baude , Samuel L. Bray |
PROPER PARTIES, PROPER RELIEF |
137 Harvard Law Review 153 (November, 2023) |
In the last Term at the United States Supreme Court, standing was the critical question in several major cases: the two challenges to the Biden Administration's first student loan forgiveness plan, Biden v. Nebraska and Department of Education v. Brown, as well as the challenge to the Administration's immigration priorities in United States v.... |
2023 |
Brenda Pfahnl |
PROTECTING AMERICAN BLOOD FROM "ALIEN CONTAMINATION": SHOULD STRICT SCRUTINY APPLY TO THE RACIST ROOTS OF 8 U.S.C. § 1326? UNITED STATES v. CARRILLO-LOPEZ, 555 F. SUPP. 3D 996 (D. NEV. 2021) |
49 Mitchell Hamline Law Review 316 (April, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 318 II. Legislative History and the Influence of Eugenics in Immigration Law. 319 A. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882. 320 B. The Immigration Act of 1917. 321 C. The Immigration Act of 1924--The National Origins Act. 322 D. Act of 1929--The Undesirable Aliens Act. 323 E. Mexican Farm Labor Program (1942) (The Bracero Program).... |
2023 |
Meredith Van Natta , Department of Sociology, University of California, Merced, Merced, California, USA |
PUBLIC CHARGE, LEGAL ESTRANGEMENT, AND RENEGOTIATING SITUATIONAL TRUST IN THE US HEALTHCARE SAFETY NET |
57 Law and Society Review 531 (December, 2023) |
US immigration law increasingly excludes many immigrants materially and symbolically from vital safety-net resources. Existing scholarship has emphasized the public charge rule as a key mechanism for enacting these exclusionary trends, but less is known about how recent public charge uncertainty has shaped how noncitizens and healthcare workers... |
2023 |
Sam Kalen |
PUBLIC LAND MANAGEMENT'S FUTURE PLACE: ENVISIONING A PARADIGM SHIFT |
82 Maryland Law Review 240 (2023) |
The recent sesquicentennial of Yellowstone National Park, the nation's first and prototypical national park, marked an opportune moment for examining the management of the nation's public lands. Public lands are confronting a myriad of challenges, whether from climate change and the efficacy of using the nation's lands for fossil fuel development... |
2023 |
Natsu Taylor Saito |
RACE, INDIGENEITY, AND MIGRATION |
117 AJIL Unbound 43 (2023) |
Race, indigeneity, and migration are integrally related in international law. This relationship can be traced to their origins in a legal system dedicated to facilitating European colonialism and imperial expansion. International law has constructed racial difference and deployed racialized hierarchies to determine who would be permitted to migrate... |
2023 |
Natsu Taylor Saito |
RACE, RELIGION, AND NATIONAL IDENTITY REVIEW OF SAHAR AZIZ, THE RACIAL MUSLIM: WHEN RACISM QUASHES RELIGIOUS FREEDOM (UC PRESS, 2022) |
50 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 169 (March, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 169 I. Being Muslim in the United States. 171 II. Structural Drivers of Islamophobia. 173 III. National Identity in a Settler State. 175 Conclusion. 180 |
2023 |
Bennett Capers , Gregory Day |
RACE-ING ANTITRUST |
121 Michigan Law Review 523 (February, 2023) |
Antitrust law has a race problem. To spot an antitrust violation, courts inquire into whether an act has degraded consumer welfare. Since anticompetitive practices are often assumed to enhance consumer welfare, antitrust offenses are rarely found. Key to this framework is that antitrust treats all consumers monolithically; that consumers are... |
2023 |
Rachel F. Moran |
RACIAL EQUALITY, RELIGIOUS LIBERTY, AND THE COMPLICATIONS OF PLURALISM |
50 Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly 149 (March, 2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents I. Historical Injustices: The Meaning of Race. 150 II. Contemporary Wrongs and the Role of Racialization. 155 III. Demographic Change, Pluralism Anxiety, and the Challenges for Equality and Liberty. 162 IV. Conclusion. 166 |
2023 |
Jessica Dixon Weaver |
RACIAL MYOPIA IN [FAMILY] LAW |
132 Yale Law Journal Forum 1086 (4/30/2023) |
ABSTRACT. Racial Myopia in [Family] Law presents a critique of Family Law for the One-Hundred-Year Life, an Article that claims that age myopia within family law fails older adults and prevents them from creating legal bonds with other adults outside the traditional marital model. This Response posits that racial myopia is a common yet complex... |
2023 |
Daria Roithmayr |
RACISM PAYS: HOW RACIAL EXPLOITATION GETS INNOVATION OFF THE GROUND |
28 Michigan Journal of Race and Law 145 (Spring, 2023) |
Recent work on the history of capitalism documents the key role that racial exploitation played in the launch of the global cotton economy and the construction of the transcontinental railroad. But racial exploitation is not a thing of the past. Drawing on three case studies, this Paper argues that some of our most celebrated innovations in the... |
2023 |
Eugene Lee |
RECOGNIZING THE RIGHT TO FAMILY UNITY IN IMMIGRATION LAW |
121 Michigan Law Review 677 (February, 2023) |
The Trump Administration's travel ban and separation of families at the U.S.-Mexico border drew newfound attention to the constitutional due process right to family unity. But even before then, the right to family unity has had a substantial history. Rooted in the Supreme Court's line of privacy rights cases, the right to family unity is amorphous.... |
2023 |
Eleanor Brown |
REFLECTIONS: MY MOTHER WHO FATHERED ME |
72 Washington University Journal of Law & Policy 167 (2023) |
I went away from the window over the dripping sacks and into a corner which the weather had forgotten. And what did I remember? My father who had only fathered the idea of me had left me the sole liability of my mother who really fathered me. - George Lamming, In the Castle of My Skin, 11 Despite the prevalence of West Indian Americans and their... |
2023 |
Caroline Nalule |
REFUGEE BURDEN-AND-RESPONSIBILITY SHARING: REVISITING THE DEBATE ON THE RIGHT TO COMPENSATION TO REFUGEE-HOSTING STATES |
31 Michigan State International Law Review 441 (2023) |
Much of the world's rising refugee population is situated in developing countries most of which struggle to fulfil their developmental obligations towards their own citizens, while the better financially-placed countries are increasingly changing their asylum policies to avoid most of the obligations that come with the admission of high numbers of... |
2023 |
Shana Tabak |
REFUGEE DETENTION AS CONSTRUCTIVE REFOULEMENT |
48 Yale Journal of International Law 289 (Summer, 2023) |
The most fundamental obligation that states owe to refugees under the 1951 United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees is the commitment of non-refoulement. This commitment to not force back a refugee to a country where she may face serious harm to her life or liberty demands that states interrogate whether their treatment of... |
2023 |
Shikha Silliman Bhattacharjee |
REGULATING RECRUITMENT: MIGRATION, CRIMINALIZATION, AND COMPOUNDED INFORMALITY |
18 University of Pennsylvania Asian Law Review 217 (April, 2023) |
Across the globe, migrant workers are increasingly concentrated in temporary employment, including contract, short-term, and contingent work. These short-term employment stints require them to find new work on a regular and ongoing basis. How can legal frameworks encourage recruitment practices that protect the interests of both workers and... |
2023 |
Beth Caldwell |
REIFYING INJUSTICE: USING CULTURALLY SPECIFIC TATTOOS AS A MARKER OF GANG MEMBERSHIP |
98 Washington Law Review 787 (October, 2023) |
Abstract: The gang label has been so highly racialized that white people who self-identify as gang members are almost never categorized as gang members by law enforcement, while Black and Latino people who are not gang members are routinely labeled and targeted as if they were. Different rules attach to people under criminal law once they are... |
2023 |
Hesley Gonzalez |
RELEASE FROM LEGAL PURGATORY: ADDING A CATEGORY TO THE SECRETARY OF HOMELAND SECURITY'S POWER TO PAROLE IN PLACE |
50 Western State Law Review 21 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-3Table of Contents I. Introduction. 21 II. The History of Immigration Legislation. 26 A. Immigration Legislation, From America's Inception to 2001. 26 B. Restructuring the Immigration System in the Twenty-First Century. 29 III. The Inability to Pass Immigration Reform. 31 A. The Politicization of Immigration. 31 B. The Legislative Branch's... |
2023 |
Randi Mandelbaum |
RELEASE TO SPONSOR APPROVED, NOW WHAT? |
91 Fordham Law Review Online 83 (2023) |
Naomi, a fourteen-year-old girl fleeing family violence in her native country of Honduras, spent five months detained by the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR), before being released to her cousin. Because the cousin was a distant relative, a home study was required. In addition, upon her release, the cousin and Naomi were referred for... |
2023 |
Angela Stoltzfus |
REMAIN IN MEXICO: THE MIGRANT PROTECTION PROTOCOLS' FAILURE TO PROTECT |
95 Temple Law Review Online 1 (2023) |
Only days before the 2018 midterm election, President Donald Trump called immigrants, or asylum seekers, fleeing violence an invasion. It was not unusual for Trump to use this type of pejorative language--Trump had publicly used demeaning terms such as predator and killer to refer to immigrants at the southern border not once or twice, but... |
2023 |
Clayton P. Gillette |
REMOTE WORK AND CITY DECLINE: LESSONS FROM THE GARMENT DISTRICT |
15 Journal of Legal Analysis 201 (2023) |
The dramatic rise of remote work threatens the traditional source of urban growth--the unique ability of dense cities to provide a setting in which firms and employees share productive resources, match needs with skills, and transmit knowledge at low cost. These agglomeration benefits have induced cities to pursue clusters of related firms that... |
2023 |
Thalia González |
RESTORATIVE JUSTICE DIVERSION AS A STRUCTURAL HEALTH INTERVENTION IN THE CRIMINAL LEGAL SYSTEM |
113 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 541 (Summer, 2023) |
A new discourse at the intersection of criminal justice and public health is bringing to light how exposure to the ordinariness of racism in the criminal legal system--whether in policing practices or carceral settings--leads to extraordinary outcomes in health. Drawing on empirical evidence of the deleterious health effects of system involvement... |
2023 |
Melissa H. Weresh |
RETHINKING RHETORIC IN THE ASYLUM CONTEXT: LESSONS FROM #METOO |
30 UCLA Journal of Gender & Law 65 (Summer, 2023) |
Women face greater difficulties than men in establishing asylum in the United States. This is due in part to the fact that the Refugee Act situates asylum primarily in forms of persecution associated with the male experience. Women who seek asylum in the United States because they flee gender-based violence must establish that their persecution... |
2023 |
Cybelle Fox |
RETHINKING SANCTUARY: THE ORIGINS OF NON-COOPERATION POLICIES IN SOCIAL WELFARE AGENCIES |
48 Law and Social Inquiry 175 (February, 2023) |
Too often, scholarship on immigration conflates sanctuary ordinances with the noncooperation policies, often embedded in these ordinances, which limit cooperation between local officials and federal immigration authorities. In this article, I disentangle the two by tracing the rise of non-cooperation policies in health and welfare agencies since... |
2023 |
Carlota Gonzalez Gallego |
REVIEW OF THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK FOR REFUGEES AND PROPOSALS FOR THE EFFECTIVE PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IN THE CONTEXT OF THE CLIMATE EMERGENCY |
29 ILSA Journal of International and Comparative Law 411 (Summer, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 412 II. The Impact of Climate Change on Refugee Law: Differences Between the European Union and International Law. 414 A. Climate change: the main cause of environmental migration. 414 B. New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants. 420 C. The European Union and the refugees. 423 D. Mexico's Refugee System. 425 III. Comparative... |
2023 |
Bailey McNamara |
REVISITING "REFUGEE" IN A CHANGING CLIMATE: HOW MIGRANTS IMPACTED BY CLIMATE CHANGE AND THE TRANSBOUNDARY MOVEMENT OF HAZARDOUS WASTE FIT INTO EXISTING REFUGEE POLICY |
54 Seton Hall Law Review 571 (2023) |
More than 10 percent of the world's population may lack secure, legal residence by the year 2050. Projections of mass migration accompany increasingly dire predictions of climate change impacts. Rising global temperatures, elevating ocean levels, and intensifying droughts are projected to displace more than one billion people in the next thirty... |
2023 |
Richard Frankel |
RISK ASSESSMENT AND IMMIGRATION COURT |
80 Washington and Lee Law Review 1 (Winter, 2023) |
Risk assessment and algorithmic tools have become increasingly popular in recent years, particularly with respect to detention and incarceration decisions. The emergence of big data and the increased sophistication of algorithmic design hold the promise of more accurately predicting whether an individual is dangerous or a flight risk, overcoming... |
2023 |
Naomi Murakawa |
SAY THEIR NAMES, SUPPORT THEIR KILLERS: POLICE REFORM AFTER THE 2020 BLACK LIVES MATTER UPRISINGS |
69 UCLA Law Review 1430 (September, 2023) |
Since the unprecedented Summer 2020 uprisings against policing and racism, many elites have embraced an anti-woke politics that openly celebrates law-and-order authoritarianism, heteropatriarchy, and white nationalism. This Article attends to a different but reinforcing response to the George Floyd uprisings: repression through a politics of... |
2023 |
|
SCOTUS ON IMMIGRATION: A REVIEW OF RECENT DECISIONS & WHAT'S TO COME |
29 Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights & Social Justice 535 (Winter, 2023) |
MS. HEIDI SANDOMIR: [G]ood evening, everyone. Thank you so much for coming. My name is Heidi Sandomir, and I'm the Editor-in-Chief of the Cardozo Journal of Equal Rights and Social Justice at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. It is my pleasure to welcome you all to our fall symposium, SCOTUS on Immigration: A Review of Recent Decisions and... |
2023 |
Ingrid Eagly |
SECOND CHANCES IN CRIMINAL AND IMMIGRATION LAW |
98 Indiana Law Journal 977 (Spring, 2023) |
This Essay publishes the remarks given by Professor Ingrid Eagly at the 2022 Fuchs Lecture at Indiana University Maurer School of Law. The Fuchs Lecture was established in honor of Ralph Follen Fuchs in 2001. Professor Fuchs, who served on the Indiana University law faculty from 1946 until his retirement in 1970, was awarded the title of university... |
2023 |
Nina Rabin |
SECOND-WAVE DREAMERS |
42 Yale Law and Policy Review 107 (Fall, 2023) |
This Article compares and contrasts two waves of child migrants that have shaped the U.S. immigration policy agenda and debate over the past twenty years, in order to draw lessons about how public schools and policymakers can best serve today's immigrant students. The first wave of undocumented children, who arrived in the two decades after 1986... |
2023 |
Gabriel J. Chin |
SLAVE LAW, RACE LAW |
94 University of Colorado Law Review 551 (Spring, 2023) |
Introduction. 551 I. Free Black People and Enslaved Persons. 558 II. Regulating All Non-White People. 564 Conclusion. 569 |
2023 |
Matthew Boaz |
SPECULATIVE IMMIGRATION POLICY |
37 Georgetown Immigration Law Journal 183 (Winter, 2023) |
This Article considers how speculative fiction was wielded by the Trump administration to implement destructive U.S. immigration policy. It analyzes the thematic elements from a particular apocalyptic novel, traces those themes through actual policy implemented by the president, and considers the harm effected by such policies. This Article... |
2023 |
Alina Das |
STANDING ON IMMIGRANT SUBORDINATION |
72 American University Law Review Forum 147 (June, 2023) |
In The Rise of the Immigrant-as-Injury Theory of State Standing, Professor Jennifer Lee Koh identifies and critiques an emerging theory of state standing that treats the existence of immigrants as an injury to the state for purposes of challenging federal immigration policies. Koh persuasively critiques the immigrant-as-injury theory on... |
2023 |
Pooja R. Dadhania |
STATE RESPONSIBILITY FOR FORCED MIGRATION |
64 Boston College Law Review 745 (April, 2023) |
Introduction. 746 I. Forced Migration and the Potential Role of State Responsibility. 750 A. Gaps in International Refugee Law's Protection of Forced Migrants. 750 B. The Doctrine of State Responsibility. 753 II. Overview of the Forced Migration Case Studies. 757 A. The 2022 Russian Invasion of Ukraine. 758 B. The 2003 U.S.-Led Invasion of Iraq.... |
2023 |
Zoha Waseem |
STATELESS AND VULNERABLE: RACE, POLICING, AND CITIZENSHIP IN PAKISTAN |
46 PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review 128 (May, 2023) |
Some time ago, I approached a senior police officer in Pakistan, hoping to pitch a participatory action research project. The one I had in mind, I hoped, would help improve police-community interactions, especially in the context of migrant communities and those social groups rendered vulnerable due to their contested citizenship status or because... |
2023 |
Naima Fifita |
STEPS TOWARD A "DIGNIFIED" CLIMATE-MIGRATION FOR PACIFIC PEOPLES |
24 Asian-Pacific Law and Policy Journal 53 (Spring, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 53 II. What Are We Fighting For?. 59 A. The Environmental Wrong. 59 B. Existing Refugee Framework and its Inadequacy in the Face of Climate Migration. 62 III. A Values-Based Analytical Framework. 65 A. Tu Tokotasi: Self-Determination and Environmental Justice in the Context of Climate Change and Climate-Induced Migration. 67 1.... |
2023 |
Abigail Stepnitz |
STORIED PASTS: CREDIBILITY AND EVOLVING NORMS IN ASYLUM NARRATIVES 1989-2018 |
41 Minnesota Journal of Law & Inequality 1 (Summer, 2023) |
This Article develops a frame work for under standing the emergence and evolution of structural and substantive norms in asylum narratives over time. First, I offer a historical framework which shows how these norms evolve as a result of combined legal, political, cultural, and institutional changes. Institutional norms are infused with politics.... |
2023 |
Joy Kanwar |
STORIES FROM THE NEGATIVE SPACES: UNITED STATES v. THIND AND THE NARRATIVE OF (NON)WHITENESS |
74 Mercer Law Review 801 (Spring, 2023) |
You must never be limited by external authority, whether it be vested in a church, [person] or book. It is your right to question, challenge, and investigate. - Bhagat Singh Thind For years, Bhagat Singh Thind's case has resonated in my mind. I thought of it in the days after September 11, 2001, when a group of attorneys and I scrambled to... |
2023 |
Erin Carrington Smith |
STUCK IN THE WAITING ROOM: WHY AND HOW MARYLAND SHOULD CLOSE HEALTHCARE GAPS THAT LEAVE IMMIGRANT WOMEN BEHIND |
53 University of Baltimore Law Forum 159 (Spring, 2023) |
Maryland has a robust and ever-increasing immigrant population. As of 2019, just over fifteen percent of the state's population (929,431) was foreign born, forty-eight percent (447,466) of whom remained noncitizens. In 2016, about 275,000 immigrants were undocumented. Maryland has long recognized the importance of ensuring its immigrant population... |
2023 |
Laila L. Hlass, Mary Yanik |
STUDYING THE HAZY LINE BETWEEN PROCEDURE AND SUBSTANCE IN IMMIGRANT DETENTION LITIGATION |
58 Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review 203 (Winter, 2023) |
At age six, Hyung Joon Kim came to the United States with his family. Two years later, he became a lawful permanent resident (LPR). Mr. Kim grew up in California, where he attended public schools. In 1996, at age 18, his life was irreparably changed. After breaking into a tool shed with high school friends, he was convicted of burglary. He earned... |
2023 |
Ming Hsu Chen |
TEACHING INTERDISCIPLINARY PERSPECTIVES ON CITIZENSHIP AND IMMIGRATION |
67 Saint Louis University Law Journal 513 (Spring, 2023) |
This essay reflects on the use of interdisciplinary perspectives in teaching survey and seminar classes on immigration and citizenship. It focuses on three benefits. First, empirical research gives the doctrine a reality check. Second, normative inquiry evaluates the doctrine against desired values. Third, policy analysis opens up possibilities for... |
2023 |