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Full-Text Articles in Law
A Suspended Death Sentence: Habeas Review Of Expedited Removal Decisions, Lauren Schusterman
A Suspended Death Sentence: Habeas Review Of Expedited Removal Decisions, Lauren Schusterman
Michigan Law Review
Expedited removal allows low-level immigration officers to summarily order the deportation of certain noncitizens, frequently with little to no judicial oversight. Noncitizens with legitimate asylum claims should not find themselves in expedited removal. When picked up by immigration authorities, they should be referred for a credible fear interview and then for more thorough proceedings.
Although there is clear congressional intent that asylum seekers not be subjected to expedited removal, mounting evidence suggests that expedited removal fails to identify bona fide asylum seekers. Consequently, many of them are sent back to persecution. Such decisions have weighty consequences, but they have remained …
Doors To Safety: Exit West, Refugee Resettlement, And The Right To Asylum, Betsy L. Fisher
Doors To Safety: Exit West, Refugee Resettlement, And The Right To Asylum, Betsy L. Fisher
Michigan Law Review
Review of Mohsin Hamid's Exit West.
Reconciling Expectations With Reality: The Real Id Act's Corroboration Exception For Otherwise Credible Asylum Applicants, Alexandra Lane Reed
Reconciling Expectations With Reality: The Real Id Act's Corroboration Exception For Otherwise Credible Asylum Applicants, Alexandra Lane Reed
Michigan Law Review
The international community finds itself today in the throes of the largest refugee crisis since World War II. As millions of refugees continue to flee violence and persecution at home, the immediate concern is humanitarian, but in the long-term, the important question becomes: What are our obligations to those who cannot return home? U.S. asylum law is designed not only to offer shelter to legitimate refugees, but also to protect the country from those who seek asylum under false pretenses. Lawmakers and policymakers have struggled to calibrate corroboration requirements for asylum claims with the reality that many legitimate asylum seekers …
Chadha, Abner J. Mikva
Chadha, Abner J. Mikva
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Chadha by Barbara Hinkson Craig
Sanctuary: The New Underground Railroad, Daniel M. Brinks
Sanctuary: The New Underground Railroad, Daniel M. Brinks
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Sanctuary: The New Underground Railroad by Renny Golden and Michael McConnell
The Indefinite Detention Of Excluded Aliens: Statutory And Constitutional Justifications And Limitations, Michigan Law Review
The Indefinite Detention Of Excluded Aliens: Statutory And Constitutional Justifications And Limitations, Michigan Law Review
Michigan Law Review
Part I of this Note examines the statutory authority for the indefinite detention of excluded aliens. It concludes that although the INA does not explicitly authorize such detention, the statute's purposes and specific provisions imply that Congress intended to establish a statutory preference for the detention of excluded aliens. The Note then argues in Part II that indefinite detention is constitutionally permissible when it is necessary to vindicate the government's sovereign right to exclude aliens. The Note concludes, however, that the Constitution requires the government to make a continuing good faith effort to deport a detained, excluded alien.
Garcia-Mora: International Law And Asylum As A Human Right, Alona E. Evans
Garcia-Mora: International Law And Asylum As A Human Right, Alona E. Evans
Michigan Law Review
A Review of International Law and Asylum as a Human Right. By Manuel R. Garcia-Mora.