This Article seeks to prioritize the civil workplace rights of undocumented immigrants over the goals of immigration enforcement by placing primacy on the role of the immigrant undocumented worker as private attorney general. In developing this concept, this Article draws from the legal framework addressing human trafficking. In theory, undocumented workers victimized by exploitive employment practices may act as private attorneys general in the enforcement of workplace harms and may sue their employers under many of the same civil rights laws that protect citizen workers. Regardless of whether workers are foreign-born, the substantive guarantees of our civil rights laws protect all workers against exploitation. The Thirteenth Amendment gua...
Given the recent influxes of undocumented workers who have entered the United States in order to obt...
To be sure, the lion\u27s share of immigration enforcement still rests with government authorities. ...
In Hoffman Plastic Compounds v. NLRB, 535 U.S. 137 (2002), the United States Supreme Court held that...
This Article seeks to prioritize the civil workplace rights of undocumented immigrants over the goal...
Federal and state policies that make immigrant work putatively illegal are in tension with a constit...
Should a nation extend legal rights to those who enter the country illegally? The Supreme Court rece...
This article seeks to provide migrant rights advocates with international legal arguments that can b...
The presence of an estimated 11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the United States, of which an ...
As the economic gap between rich and poor countries continues to grow, those living in poor countrie...
This Article argues that sound public policy supports states providing vocational rehabilitation ser...
This article explores the rights of illegal immigrants and undocumented workers throughout the world...
Wage theft and its frequent exploitative companions, trafficking and involuntary servitude, have see...
This Article examines the legal status and rights of undocumented workers under the National Labor R...
Despite extensive and ongoing immigration enforcement efforts, undocumented workers continue to have...
This article applies the tenets of bureaucratic incorporation theory to an investigation of bureaucr...
Given the recent influxes of undocumented workers who have entered the United States in order to obt...
To be sure, the lion\u27s share of immigration enforcement still rests with government authorities. ...
In Hoffman Plastic Compounds v. NLRB, 535 U.S. 137 (2002), the United States Supreme Court held that...
This Article seeks to prioritize the civil workplace rights of undocumented immigrants over the goal...
Federal and state policies that make immigrant work putatively illegal are in tension with a constit...
Should a nation extend legal rights to those who enter the country illegally? The Supreme Court rece...
This article seeks to provide migrant rights advocates with international legal arguments that can b...
The presence of an estimated 11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the United States, of which an ...
As the economic gap between rich and poor countries continues to grow, those living in poor countrie...
This Article argues that sound public policy supports states providing vocational rehabilitation ser...
This article explores the rights of illegal immigrants and undocumented workers throughout the world...
Wage theft and its frequent exploitative companions, trafficking and involuntary servitude, have see...
This Article examines the legal status and rights of undocumented workers under the National Labor R...
Despite extensive and ongoing immigration enforcement efforts, undocumented workers continue to have...
This article applies the tenets of bureaucratic incorporation theory to an investigation of bureaucr...
Given the recent influxes of undocumented workers who have entered the United States in order to obt...
To be sure, the lion\u27s share of immigration enforcement still rests with government authorities. ...
In Hoffman Plastic Compounds v. NLRB, 535 U.S. 137 (2002), the United States Supreme Court held that...