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Immigration Law

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2008

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Institution
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Articles 1 - 30 of 39

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Search For June Cleaver: International Marriage Brokerages And Mail-Order Brides, Itta C. Englander Sep 2008

The Search For June Cleaver: International Marriage Brokerages And Mail-Order Brides, Itta C. Englander

Itta C. Englander

This paper chronicles a journey through the modern mail-order bride industry. It examines the mail-order bride industry from its early roots in the Western Hemisphere to its current permutations. It discusses the risks that mail-order brides face and explores possible solutions offered through domestic and international instrumentalities.


Not In My Backyard: On The Morality Of Responsibility-Sharing In Refugee Law, Tally Kritzman-Amir Sep 2008

Not In My Backyard: On The Morality Of Responsibility-Sharing In Refugee Law, Tally Kritzman-Amir

Tally Kritzman-Amir

In this article I argue that the responsibility for protecting of refugees should be shared between the states of the world, rather than allocated in a random manner to the first country of asylum. I will start by explaining why the protection and provision of assistance to refugees is a responsibility-sharing problem. I will turn to discussing the moral considerations which should lead to responsibility-sharing efforts in the context of refugee migration. Then I will offer specific criteria to govern the allocation of responsibility to each country, which should be balanced and weighed against each-other in each refugee crisis, to …


Non-Refoulement And Jus Cogens: Limiting Anti-Terror Measures That Threaten Refugee Protection, Alice Farmer Sep 2008

Non-Refoulement And Jus Cogens: Limiting Anti-Terror Measures That Threaten Refugee Protection, Alice Farmer

Alice H Farmer

This article argues that we must insist on strict limits to the exceptions to non-refoulement articulated in the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees, given current state obligations under international law. There is great potential for refugee-receiving states to rely heavily on the exceptions to non-refoulement in enacting anti-terrorism policies, to the detriment of refugee protection. And yet, non-refoulement – the doctrine central to refugee protection that prohibits return of an individual to a country in which he or she may be persecuted – is emerging as a new jus cogens norm. Non-refoulement as articulated in the 1951 Convention …


Gender, Masculinities And Immigrant Workers: Using Gendered Experiences In The Las Vegas Residential Construction Trades To Reframe Title Vii Analysis, Leticia M. Saucedo Sep 2008

Gender, Masculinities And Immigrant Workers: Using Gendered Experiences In The Las Vegas Residential Construction Trades To Reframe Title Vii Analysis, Leticia M. Saucedo

Leticia M. Saucedo

This Article explores the intersection of gender, immigration and masculinities in the context of the immigrant workplace in the United States. It does so by analyzing some of the findings from the Immigrant Construction Worker Study, a qualitative empirical study conducted in Las Vegas, Nevada of immigrant construction workers employed in the residential construction industry. Between 2006 and 2007 the author and her collaborator, sociologist Cristina Morales, interviewed over seventy-five (75) male and female construction workers in Las Vegas, with the purpose of understanding the demographic changes in the residential construction industry and their effects on workers. The study’s empirical …


A Localist Reading Of Local Immigration Regulations, Rick Su Sep 2008

A Localist Reading Of Local Immigration Regulations, Rick Su

Journal Articles

The conventional account of immigration-related activity at the local level often assumes that the "local" is simply a new battleground in the national immigration debates. This article questions that presumption. Foregrounding the legal rules that define local governments and channels local action, this article argues that the local immigration "crisis" is much less a consequence of federal immigration policy than normally assumed. Rather, it can also be understood as a familiar byproduct of localism: the legal and cultural assumptions that shape how we structure and organize local communities, provide and allocate local services, and define the legal relationship of local, …


Avoiding The 'Secret Sentence': A Model For Ensuring That New Jersey Criminal Defendants Are Advised About Immigration Consequences Before Entering Guilty Pleas, Joanne Gottesman Aug 2008

Avoiding The 'Secret Sentence': A Model For Ensuring That New Jersey Criminal Defendants Are Advised About Immigration Consequences Before Entering Guilty Pleas, Joanne Gottesman

Joanne Gottesman

Reforms over the past decade have transformed the immigration law landscape and have led to more noncitizens than ever being subject to removal for less serious crimes than in the past. As a result of these changes, proper counseling of noncitizen criminal defendants is more critical than ever. This article examines the current state of the law in New Jersey regarding immigration related ineffective assistance of counsel claims and the responsibility of criminal defense attorneys to advise noncitizen clients about immigration consequences. It recommends judicial, legislative, and professional changes to better ensure that noncitizen defendants are properly advised about immigration …


The Immigration Paradox: Alien Workers And Distributive Justice, Howard F. Chang Jul 2008

The Immigration Paradox: Alien Workers And Distributive Justice, Howard F. Chang

All Faculty Scholarship

The immigration of relatively unskilled workers poses a fundamental problem for liberals. While from the perspective of the economic welfare of natives, the optimal policy would be to admit these aliens as guest workers, this policy would violate liberal ideals. These ideals would treat these workers as equals, entitled to access to citizenship and to the full set of public benefits provided to citizens. If the welfare of incumbent residents determines admissions policies, however, and we anticipate the fiscal burden that the immigration of the poor would impose, then our welfare criterion would preclude the admission of relatively unskilled workers …


Homeland Security Challenges Of Global Climate Change, Patrick E. Tolan Jul 2008

Homeland Security Challenges Of Global Climate Change, Patrick E. Tolan

Patrick E. Tolan Jr.

The National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2008 directs military planners to consider the effects of climate change on national security. This directive is not surprising following a year of increasing concern about global warming and prognostications of the myriad ills that such warming will produce.

Although some excellent articles have recently been published exploring potential overseas consequences to the Department of Defense, this article instead outlines the perhaps even more significant national security threats to the U.S. homeland.

The article takes a three-pronged approach analyzing potential weather effects, refugee issues, and economic consequences that could be prompted by …


The Real Id Act: Is It Really Worth It?, Sheena Eastman Jul 2008

The Real Id Act: Is It Really Worth It?, Sheena Eastman

Sheena Eastman

No abstract provided.


Voices On The Run: What The Slave Narratives Can Tell Us About The Immigration Debate, Hadley Ajana Jul 2008

Voices On The Run: What The Slave Narratives Can Tell Us About The Immigration Debate, Hadley Ajana

Hadley Ajana

This paper compares three accounts of runaway slaves from the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries with three twentieth and twenty-first century accounts of Spanish speaking immigrants to the United States. The works examined are Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African, Written by Himself; Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass; Harriet Jacob's Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl; Barbara Kingsolver's Bean Trees; Victor Villasenor's Rain of Gold; and Sonia Nozaria's Enrique's Journey. Examining the rhetorical strategies used in the earlier works by the abolitions and the devices used in the modern writing, …


Overview And Analysis Of The Development, Relief, Education For Alien Minors Act (Dream Act) "What Was Not But Could Be", Jean P. Espinoza Jun 2008

Overview And Analysis Of The Development, Relief, Education For Alien Minors Act (Dream Act) "What Was Not But Could Be", Jean P. Espinoza

Jean P. Espinoza LL.M.

No abstract provided.


The Economic Realities Of Immigration In The United States: Implications For Policy, Emily A. Harrell, David L. Franklin Jun 2008

The Economic Realities Of Immigration In The United States: Implications For Policy, Emily A. Harrell, David L. Franklin

Emily A Harrell

This paper presents a discussion of economic issues regarding the recent influx of illegal immigrants into the USA and is based on a review of economic literature about the issues. It uses a set of studies to frame the economic issues in terms of the current ongoing debate regarding the benefits and costs accruing to the US economy from the upsurge in immigration. It concludes with a discussion of the political economy underlying the debates as a means for suggesting policy and or legal reform initiatives that may be warranted in light of the debates, the available analyses, and the …


``No One Does That Anymore": On Tushnet, Constitutions, And Others, Penelope J. Pether Jun 2008

``No One Does That Anymore": On Tushnet, Constitutions, And Others, Penelope J. Pether

Working Paper Series

In this contribution to the Quinnipiac Law Review’s annual symposium edition, this year devoted to the work of Mark Tushnet, I read his antijuridification scholarship “against the grain,” concluding both that Tushnet’s later scholarship is neo-Realist rather than critical in its orientation, and that both his early scholarship on slavery and his post-9/11 constitutional work reveal an ambivalence about the claim that we learn from history to circumscribe our excesses, which anchors his popular constitutionalist rhetoric.

The likeness of Tushnet’s scholarship to the work of the Realists lies in this: while the Realists’ search for a science that would satisfy …


“Militant Judgement?: Judicial Ontology, Constitutional Poetics, And ‘The Long War’”, Penelope J. Pether Jun 2008

“Militant Judgement?: Judicial Ontology, Constitutional Poetics, And ‘The Long War’”, Penelope J. Pether

Working Paper Series

This Article, a contribution to the Cardozo Law Review symposium in honor of Alain Badiou’s Being and Event, uses Badiou’s theorizing of the event and of the militant in Being and Event as a basis for an exploration of problems of judicial ontology and constitutional hermeneutics raised in recent decisions by common law courts dealing with the legislative and executive confinement of “Islamic” asylum seekers, “enemy combatants” and “terrorism suspects,” and certain classes of criminal offenders in spaces beyond the doctrines, paradigms and institutions of the criminal law. The Article proposes an ontology and a poetics of judging equal to …


Rethinking Johnson V. M’Intosh (1823): The Root Of The Continued Forced Displacement Of American Indians Despite Cobell V. Norton (2001), T S. Twibell May 2008

Rethinking Johnson V. M’Intosh (1823): The Root Of The Continued Forced Displacement Of American Indians Despite Cobell V. Norton (2001), T S. Twibell

Ty Twibell

In 1823, Justice John Marshall, Justice of the United States Supreme Court in Johnson v. M’Intosh held that the United States had “the exclusive right to settle, possess, and govern the new land and the absolute title to the soil, subject to certain right of occupancy only in the natives.” He added that “when the conquest is complete . . . the conquered inhabitants can be blended with the conquerors, or safely governed as a distinct people.” This article discusses the human rights tragedy and the line of cases and policy that stemmed from this decision which culminated in the …


“The Longest Journey, With A First Step”: Bringing Coherence To Sovereignty And Jurisdictional Issues In Global Employee Benefits Law, Paul Secunda May 2008

“The Longest Journey, With A First Step”: Bringing Coherence To Sovereignty And Jurisdictional Issues In Global Employee Benefits Law, Paul Secunda

Paul M. Secunda

One of the most neglected areas of employee benefits law in the United States today is the extraterritorial application of ERISA to U.S. employees in other countries. Additionally, the courts and legislature have not spent the necessary time to discuss ERISA coverage issues for foreign employees, both legal and illegal and both working for foreign government and non-government employers, in the United States. These are increasingly crucial areas of U.S. employee benefits law as the globalization of the world's workplaces continues apace.

After surveying the tangled web of ERISA law in this context, the article proposes two statutory fixes and …


The Suspension Of Liberties, An Extension Of Rights: Examining Habeas Jurisdiction For Non-Citizen Guantanamo Detainees In The Al Odah And Boumediene Appeals, Marina A. Torres Apr 2008

The Suspension Of Liberties, An Extension Of Rights: Examining Habeas Jurisdiction For Non-Citizen Guantanamo Detainees In The Al Odah And Boumediene Appeals, Marina A. Torres

Marina A Torres

This paper seeks to contribute to the literature surrounding the constitutional rights afforded to detainees currently held at the naval base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. More specifically, it offers a prospective and predictive analysis of the recent oral arguments heard in the consolidated Al Odah and Boumediene cases, held in December of 2007, in a historical context of previous judicial decisions and legislative decrees. Previous literature has not considered the constitutional protections, if any, afforded to non-citizen detainees held outside the territorial United States. Legal research has mainly focused on the application of either international law to Guantanamo detainees (if …


Exploitation Nation: The Thin And Grey Legal Lines Between Trafficked Persons And Abused Migrant Laborers, Dina Haynes Apr 2008

Exploitation Nation: The Thin And Grey Legal Lines Between Trafficked Persons And Abused Migrant Laborers, Dina Haynes

Dina Haynes

People around the world are on the move, pushed by external events such as civil war, political upheaval, and increasingly environmental disasters and pulled by the lure of a better life, a better job, a better way to provide for their families. The United States has created an inconsistent legal framework for responding to the exploitation of immigrants, dependent on the degree of victimhood, with the label of victim only frugally bestowed upon those who are also viewed as essential to sustaining the US economy. Trafficked persons are not useful to legitimate US businesspersons, and are accordingly protected. Agricultural and …


A Tale Of Two Cities: Is Lozano V. City Of Hazelton The Judicial Epilogue To The Story Of Local Immigration Regulation In Beaufort County, South Carolina, Jason P. Luther Apr 2008

A Tale Of Two Cities: Is Lozano V. City Of Hazelton The Judicial Epilogue To The Story Of Local Immigration Regulation In Beaufort County, South Carolina, Jason P. Luther

South Carolina Law Review

No abstract provided.


The Alien Invasion?, Ediberto Roman Feb 2008

The Alien Invasion?, Ediberto Roman

Ediberto Roman

The Alien Invasion? explores the increasingly prevalent undercurrent of xenophobia and nativism appearing both in political circles and major media outlets throughout the nation. Of prime significance to the invasion rhetoric are the arguments that the current wave of immigration is of a volume unprecedented in American history, that it negatively impacts the nation’s economy, and that it puts America’s national security at risk by allowing potential terrorists to permeate our borders. By juxtaposing the substance of such claims with empirical data demonstrating the actual effects of the Latino and Latina immigrant population, The Alien Invasion? seeks to demonstrate that …


The Idea Of Pollution, John Copeland Nagle Feb 2008

The Idea Of Pollution, John Copeland Nagle

John Copeland Nagle

Pollution is the primary target of environmental law. During the past forty years, hundreds of federal and state statutes, administrative regulations, and international treaties have established multiple approaches to addressing pollution of the air, water, and land. Yet the law still struggles to identify precisely what constitutes pollution, how much of it is tolerable, and what we should do about it.

But environmental pollution is hardly the only type of pollution. Historically, the idea of pollution referred to a host of effects upon human environments. This remains evident in contemporary anthropological literature, which studies the pollution beliefs of cultures throughout …


Hernandez-Ortiz V. Gonzales: Creating Unsound Rules For Adjudicating Asylum Claims In The Ninth Circuit, Sarah A. Schroeder Feb 2008

Hernandez-Ortiz V. Gonzales: Creating Unsound Rules For Adjudicating Asylum Claims In The Ninth Circuit, Sarah A. Schroeder

Sarah A Schroeder

United States asylum law has developed out of several international agreements to which the United States is a party. More specifically, the United States has incorporated into its domestic legislation the asylum requirements set forth in the United Nations Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (“Refugee Convention”) and the United Nations Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees (“Refugee Protocol”). The Refugee Convention accords refugee status to people who adequately demonstrate that they have been or will be persecuted on account of their race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion. However, over time new …


Myanmarese Refugees In Thailand: The Need For Effective Protection, Buhm Suk Baek, Gauri Subramanium Feb 2008

Myanmarese Refugees In Thailand: The Need For Effective Protection, Buhm Suk Baek, Gauri Subramanium

Cornell Law School J.S.D. Student Research Papers

This paper deals with the Thai government's policy on refugees with a special focus on refugees from Myanmar. It is designed to give suggestions to international human rights NGOs working in the Thai-Myanmar border areas for the protection of the human rights of Myanmarese refugees. Most international human rights NGOs in this region are lobbying for the Thai government to ratify the Refugee Convention or at the very least, take active steps towards the protection of refugees under customary international law.

This paper is, however, concerned by these NGOs’ reliance on the ratification of the Convention as a solution to …


Speech: Latinas And Their Families In Detention: The Growing Intersection Of Immigration Law And Criminal Law, Sandra Guerra Thompson Feb 2008

Speech: Latinas And Their Families In Detention: The Growing Intersection Of Immigration Law And Criminal Law, Sandra Guerra Thompson

William & Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice

In this article, Professor Sandra Guerra Thompson explores the growing enforcement of immigration law within the interior of the United States and the growing intersection of the criminal justice system and immigration law. Through the use of worksite enforcement sweeps and immigration screening by state and local law enforcement, growing numbers of undocumented persons are being taken into custody by federal immigration officials. She examines the plight of women and families held in detention centers under what are often deplorable conditions. Ironically, immigration detention centers offer fewer resources than those available in most state prisons. The immigration law judicial system …


Immigration Posses: U.S. Immigration Law And Local Enforcement Practices, Kevin J. Fandl Jan 2008

Immigration Posses: U.S. Immigration Law And Local Enforcement Practices, Kevin J. Fandl

Kevin J Fandl

The failure of the United States Congress to pass comprehensive immigration legislation at a time when the issue of immigration has reached a boiling point has created an overwhelming demand by citizens for local reform. States have responded by enacting hundreds of laws that regulate immigration at the state-level. This creates significant tension both between states with conflicting laws, which creates havens in some states and rampant enforcement in others, and between states and the federal government, which is ultimately responsible for regulating immigration law. This article examines the history of immigration legislation since the founding of the United States …


The Lost Sanctuary: Examining Sex Trafficking Through The Lens Of United States V. Ah Sou, M. Margaret Mckeown, Emily Ryo Jan 2008

The Lost Sanctuary: Examining Sex Trafficking Through The Lens Of United States V. Ah Sou, M. Margaret Mckeown, Emily Ryo

Emily Ryo

Drawing upon original court records and other previously-unexamined archival materials, this article uncovers the story of one of the earliest reported and documented cases of sex trafficking in American history, United States v. Ah Sou, 138 F. 775 (9th Cir. 1905). Through Ah Sou’s legal challenge, we investigate the development of international human rights norms relevant to sex trafficking and the domestication of those norms in U.S. law. We then examine in detail the remedies presently available for sex trafficking victims and apply those remedies retrospectively to Ah Sou’s case. We conclude that despite the development of the law—both in …


Recent Trends In The Smuggling Of Chinese Into The United States, Jason A. Blatt Jan 2008

Recent Trends In The Smuggling Of Chinese Into The United States, Jason A. Blatt

Jason A Blatt

Largely based on Chinese-language sources not previously translated into English, this article reveals the newest methods used by human smugglers to bring people from China into the United States. Besides describing where most Chinese migrants come from and conditions fueling illegal migration, this article discusses numerous factors contributing to the rapid expansion of human smuggling networks. Many of these factors, such as the expansion of underground financial networks and the decline of Taiwan’s high seas fishing industry, have not previously been analyzed in such detail. This article argues that the lack of normalized political and economic relations between China and …


Litigation Or Legislation: Protecting The Rights Of Internally Displaced Persons In Colombia, Jennifer Easterday Jan 2008

Litigation Or Legislation: Protecting The Rights Of Internally Displaced Persons In Colombia, Jennifer Easterday

Jennifer Easterday

One of the most pressing and often overlooked consequences of over 40 years of fighting in Colombia is internal displacement. Approximately 3.8 million people have been displaced in Colombia since 1985, nearly 10% of its population. This is the second worst IDP crisis in the world, second only to Sudan. IDPs in Colombia suffer egregious violations of their basic human rights everyday.

In this Article, I analyze Colombian policy and legislation concerning IDPs, and how the continuing deprivation of rights resulting from displacement has been litigated in the Colombian court system. By considering the parameters of each attempt to protect …


The Disruption Of Marital Eharmony: Distinguishing Mail-Order Brides From Online Dating In Evaluating "Good Faith Marriage", Brandon N. Robinson Jan 2008

The Disruption Of Marital Eharmony: Distinguishing Mail-Order Brides From Online Dating In Evaluating "Good Faith Marriage", Brandon N. Robinson

Brandon N. Robinson

ABSTRACT In today’s society, more and more people are turning to the information superhighway to find love. No longer confined to the girl or boy “next door,” many of today’s single men and women can connect with potential soul mates across the globe with the simple click of a button, symbolizing yet another consequence of a world community that is quickly becoming smaller and more interconnected. Once an international “match” has been made, the U.S. citizen can begin the complicated process of bringing his newfound loved one to the States. The IMO industry has a much more sinister underbelly, however, …


When “Fear Of Persecution…” Requires Deportation: “Catch 22” False-Document Prosecutions After A Grant Of Asylum, Peter Erlinder Jan 2008

When “Fear Of Persecution…” Requires Deportation: “Catch 22” False-Document Prosecutions After A Grant Of Asylum, Peter Erlinder

C. Peter Erlinder

No abstract provided.