Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Administrative Law (2)
- Administrative law (2)
- Immigration (2)
- Immigration Law (2)
- Judicial review (2)
-
- Administrative adjudication (1)
- Administrative decision making (1)
- Administrative process design (1)
- Affirmance without opinion (1)
- Agency (1)
- Asylum law (1)
- BIA (1)
- Board of Immigration Appeals (1)
- Cyberspace Law (1)
- Deference (1)
- Department of Justice (1)
- Discretion (1)
- Executive power (1)
- Federal courts (1)
- Government (1)
- Immigration judge (1)
- Immigration law (1)
- Immigration reform (1)
- Information privacy (1)
- Instrumental (1)
- Judicial Review (1)
- Refugee law (1)
- Separation of powers (1)
- Social media (1)
- Social networks (1)
Articles 1 - 5 of 5
Full-Text Articles in Law
Fulfilling Government 2.0'S Promise With Robust Privacy Protections, Danielle Citron
Fulfilling Government 2.0'S Promise With Robust Privacy Protections, Danielle Citron
Danielle Keats Citron
The public can now “friend” the White House and scores of agencies on social networks, virtual worlds, and video-sharing sites. The Obama Administration sees this trend as crucial to enhancing governmental transparency, public participation, and collaboration. As the President has underscored, government needs to tap into the public’s expertise because it doesn’t have all of the answers. To be sure, Government 2.0 might improve civic engagement. But it also might produce privacy vulnerabilities because agencies often gain access to individuals’ social network profiles, photographs, videos, and contact lists when interacting with individuals online. Little would prevent agencies from using and …
"Streamlining" The Rule Of Law: How The Department Of Justice Is Undermining Judicial Review Of Agency Action, Shruti Rana
"Streamlining" The Rule Of Law: How The Department Of Justice Is Undermining Judicial Review Of Agency Action, Shruti Rana
Shruti Rana
Judicial review of administrative decision making is an essential institutional check on agency power. Recently, however, the Department of Justice dramatically revised its regulations in an attempt to insulate its decision making from public and federal court scrutiny. These “streamlining” rules, carried out in the name of national security and immigration reform, have led to a breakdown in the rule of law in our judicial system. While much attention has been focused on the Department of Justice’s recent attempts to shield executive power from the reach of Congress, its efforts to undermine judicial review have so far escaped such scrutiny. …
The Neglected Right Of Assembly, Tabatha Abu El-Haj
The Neglected Right Of Assembly, Tabatha Abu El-Haj
Tabatha Abu El-Haj
This Article considers changes in both our understanding of the constitutional right of peaceable assembly and our regulatory practices with respect to public assemblies. It shows that through the late nineteenth century the state could only interfere with gatherings that actually disturbed the public peace, whereas today the state typically regulates all public assemblies, including those that are both peaceful and not inconvenient, before they occur, through permit requirements. Through this regulatory shift, and judicial approval of it, the substance of the right of peaceable assembly was narrowed. The history recounted in this Article is significant because it provides insight …
A Broader View Of The Immigration Adjudication Problem, Jill Family
A Broader View Of The Immigration Adjudication Problem, Jill Family
Jill E. Family
Immigration, Daniel Kanstroom