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Full-Text Articles in Law
Unaccompanied Children And The Need For Legal Representation In Immigration Proceedings, Sejal Singh
Unaccompanied Children And The Need For Legal Representation In Immigration Proceedings, Sejal Singh
St. John's Law Review
(Excerpt)
An unaccompanied child is defined as someone who enters the United States under the age of eighteen, without lawful status, and without an accompanying parent or legal guardian. Despite the term’s implication, many children do not enter the country alone but are either separated from their family members at the border or left by smugglers or other migrants near the border. The number of unaccompanied minors plunged in early 2020 due to border closures and restrictions amid the COVID-19 pandemic; however, a recent surge has led to a strain on government resources and a backlog of cases in immigration …
Give Peace A Chance: A Guide To Mediating Child Welfare Cases, Jennifer Baum
Give Peace A Chance: A Guide To Mediating Child Welfare Cases, Jennifer Baum
Faculty Publications
(Excerpt)
Would you like to speed up your cases, achieve more satisfying results for your clients, and cut back on needlessly polarizing motion practice? Since its introduction in the 1980s, child welfare mediation has helped attorneys do just that by facilitating resolutions in child protective disputes more quickly, less contentiously, and with more acceptance from stakeholders than its courtroom alternative, adversarial litigation.
If you've handled dependency cases for any length of time, you are already familiar with the crushing caseloads, emotional volatility, and high-stakes decision-making that are the hallmarks of child welfare litigation. In a growing number of jurisdictions, attorneys …