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Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2015

Fordham Law School

Faculty Scholarship

Due Process; Mathews v. Eldridge; Immigration; Individual Rights;

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Due Process And The Non-Citizen: A Revolution Reconsidered, Joseph Landau Jan 2015

Due Process And The Non-Citizen: A Revolution Reconsidered, Joseph Landau

Faculty Scholarship

Mathews v. Eldridge is typically understood to be a ruling limiting due process protections in benefits determinations, but this case of judicial restraint in ordinary domestic law has activist features where non-citizens are concerned. The transplantation of Mathews into the critical areas of immigration and national security has produced a body of law that is slowly ushering in rights-affirming outcomes and weakening conventional doctrines of exceptionalism in immigration and national security. There are two chief reasons for this. First, ever since Mathews required an explicit judicial determination of private interests, courts have used an increasingly particularistic, case-by-case analysis in immigration …