This Comment argues that the standards enunciated by the Supreme Court in Elias-Zacarias should not be applied beyond cases involving persecution on account of political opinion. Part I sets out the relevant statutes, treaties, and international documents that control U.S. asylum law. Part II describes the majority and dissenting opinions in Elias-Zacarias. Part III analyzes the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Elias-Zacarias and argues that the decision was misguided in its approach. This Comment concludes that Elias-Zacarias should be limited in its future application so that the United States can maintain its compliance with international treaty obligations
The state of the law regarding refugees in the United States has been characterized in the recent pa...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
This article strongly reaffirms the author\u27s support for the use of asylum as a way of providing ...
During the height of the Central American civil wars of the 1980s, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal...
In INS v. Elias-Zacarias, the Supreme Court examined the definition of refugee under the Refugee A...
This Article examines the evolution of the nexus requirement in United States refugee law since the ...
Moderating a session at the Workshop on the Supreme Court and Immigration and Refugee Law at the Geo...
This article will discuss in greater detail the profound defects of the Court\u27s Zacarias decision...
This Comment analyzes the different interpretations of the well-founded fear of persecution standa...
This Article examines the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal\u27s decisions concerning the Refugee Act of...
This article analyzes the vastly different approaches taken by the United States Supreme Court and t...
To receive asylum in the United States, persons must show that they are refugees. They do so by de...
With the passage of the Refugee Act of 1980, the United States took an important step toward fulfill...
This Comment contends that the Supreme Court\u27s holding in Sale was erroneous because the 1967 Pro...
This Article discusses certain instances in which claims for refugee protection could be recognized,...
The state of the law regarding refugees in the United States has been characterized in the recent pa...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
This article strongly reaffirms the author\u27s support for the use of asylum as a way of providing ...
During the height of the Central American civil wars of the 1980s, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal...
In INS v. Elias-Zacarias, the Supreme Court examined the definition of refugee under the Refugee A...
This Article examines the evolution of the nexus requirement in United States refugee law since the ...
Moderating a session at the Workshop on the Supreme Court and Immigration and Refugee Law at the Geo...
This article will discuss in greater detail the profound defects of the Court\u27s Zacarias decision...
This Comment analyzes the different interpretations of the well-founded fear of persecution standa...
This Article examines the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal\u27s decisions concerning the Refugee Act of...
This article analyzes the vastly different approaches taken by the United States Supreme Court and t...
To receive asylum in the United States, persons must show that they are refugees. They do so by de...
With the passage of the Refugee Act of 1980, the United States took an important step toward fulfill...
This Comment contends that the Supreme Court\u27s holding in Sale was erroneous because the 1967 Pro...
This Article discusses certain instances in which claims for refugee protection could be recognized,...
The state of the law regarding refugees in the United States has been characterized in the recent pa...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
This article strongly reaffirms the author\u27s support for the use of asylum as a way of providing ...