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Immigration Law

Golden Gate University School of Law

Immigration policy

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Full-Text Articles in Law

United States V. Lopez-Velasquez: What Is A "Reasonable Possibility" Of Apparent Eligibility For Relief From Deportation?, Kristina M. Seil Jan 2012

United States V. Lopez-Velasquez: What Is A "Reasonable Possibility" Of Apparent Eligibility For Relief From Deportation?, Kristina M. Seil

Golden Gate University Law Review

Modern deportation procedure is circumscribed by regulations intended to guarantee fairness and uniformity. Federal regulations thus mandate that immigration judges inform noncitizens of their eligibility for relief from deportation in an effort to ensure that unrepresented respondents in immigration proceedings make informed decisions.

Unhappily, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit has recently limited this regulation-mandated duty to inform. In United States v. Lopez-Velasquez, the Ninth Circuit held that the duty to inform is not triggered when sources outside the Ninth Circuit indicate that relief may be possible because the relevant Ninth Circuit precedent is no longer …


Addressing Immigration Issues In California: Briefing Paper, California Senate Office Of Research Mar 1994

Addressing Immigration Issues In California: Briefing Paper, California Senate Office Of Research

California Senate

No abstract provided.


Making Immigration Policy Work In The United States, California Latino Legislative Caucus Aug 1993

Making Immigration Policy Work In The United States, California Latino Legislative Caucus

California Assembly

Nowhere in the United States has immigration become as controversial a political issue as in California. In the 1980s, immigrants accounted for one-third of the nation's population growth, with California absorbing about half of the newcomers. The recent recession has prompted some to blame the State's complex problems - such as unemployment, crime, and the dwindling availability of public resources - on this influx of immigrants. Immigrants are accused of abusing government assistance programs, contributing little or no tax revenue to the public coffers, taking jobs from U.S. citizens and failing to adjust to new communities. These concerns are heightened …


Californians Together: Defining The State's Role In Immigration, California Senate Office Of Research Jul 1993

Californians Together: Defining The State's Role In Immigration, California Senate Office Of Research

California Senate

No abstract provided.