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Immigration Law Commons

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Articles 1 - 5 of 5

Full-Text Articles in Immigration Law

Calculated Kindness: Refugees And American's Half-Open Door, 1945 To The Present, By Gil Loescher And John A. Scanlan, Arthur C. Helton Jul 1987

Calculated Kindness: Refugees And American's Half-Open Door, 1945 To The Present, By Gil Loescher And John A. Scanlan, Arthur C. Helton

Indiana Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Project Save: Can It Work?, Madelyn S. Lozano Apr 1987

Project Save: Can It Work?, Madelyn S. Lozano

University of Miami Inter-American Law Review

No abstract provided.


Detention Of Aliens, Paul Wickham Schmidt Mar 1987

Detention Of Aliens, Paul Wickham Schmidt

San Diego Law Review

This Article examines the general principles relating to detention of aliens in exclusion and deportation situations. The author surveys the legal issues in various important areas of the detention controversy. The author concludes by exploring how the Immigration and Naturalization Service can most effectively utilize detention in the future.


Why The Mccarran-Walter Act Must Be Amended, John Scanlan Jan 1987

Why The Mccarran-Walter Act Must Be Amended, John Scanlan

Articles by Maurer Faculty

No abstract provided.


Shouting Incitement In The Courtroom: An Evolving Theory Of Civil Liability Comment., Michael P. Kopech Jan 1987

Shouting Incitement In The Courtroom: An Evolving Theory Of Civil Liability Comment., Michael P. Kopech

St. Mary's Law Journal

Civil incitement is an evolving theory, intended to ascribe liability to a publisher. Civil incitement charges that the contents of a publication proximately caused the plaintiff’s physical injury, thus holding publishers civilly liable for the physical consequences of their communications. However, the validity of civil incitement as an actionable tort clashes with the principles of freedom of speech and press embodied within the First Amendment. Incitement, as a successful cause of action, demands following the standards set out in Brandenburg v. Ohio. Prior attempts to hold publishers civilly liable for the physical consequences of their communications have rarely survived motions …