The Immigration and Nationality Act vests enormous discretion in the Attorney General and subordinates, such discretion exercised frequently at all levels of the immigration system. Despite this, though, judicial review of these decisions has followed a very uneven, troubled course. This Article explores the reasons for this, focusing first on the Administrative Procedure Act and the elusive meaning of discretion itself. The author demonstrates the disintegration of administrative law and what he sees as the failure of its general precepts to accommodate immigration issues. The Article traces the development of faulty doctrine through case law, resulting in a stunted judicial review. The author recommends developing a more particularized ...
This book analyses how the system of immigration judicial reviews works in practice, as an area whic...
Today, jurisdiction over immigration law is by no means well defined by clear limits. Limitations on...
Darkside Discretion refers to a situation where the noncitizen satisfies the statutory criteria set...
The Immigration and Nationality Act vests enormous discretion in the Attorney General and her subord...
Legal scholars and judges have long examined the role of judicial review in immigration matters, and...
Among the many problems facing u.s. immigration law is a crisis of discretion and judicial deference...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
This Article examines the exercise of administrative discretion under the immigration laws under pra...
This article discusses judicial review in immigration cases. The author states that the courts are t...
For the past quarter century, the “plenary power” doctrine of immigration law—under which courts sus...
IMMIGRATION AND THE JUDICIARY: LAW AND POLITICS IN BRITAIN AND AMERICA. By Stephen H. Legomsky.t New...
The concept of prosecutorial discretion appears in the immigration statute, agency memoranda and c...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This Article examines the conflicting decisions of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth ...
This book analyses how the system of immigration judicial reviews works in practice, as an area whic...
Today, jurisdiction over immigration law is by no means well defined by clear limits. Limitations on...
Darkside Discretion refers to a situation where the noncitizen satisfies the statutory criteria set...
The Immigration and Nationality Act vests enormous discretion in the Attorney General and her subord...
Legal scholars and judges have long examined the role of judicial review in immigration matters, and...
Among the many problems facing u.s. immigration law is a crisis of discretion and judicial deference...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
This Article examines the exercise of administrative discretion under the immigration laws under pra...
This article discusses judicial review in immigration cases. The author states that the courts are t...
For the past quarter century, the “plenary power” doctrine of immigration law—under which courts sus...
IMMIGRATION AND THE JUDICIARY: LAW AND POLITICS IN BRITAIN AND AMERICA. By Stephen H. Legomsky.t New...
The concept of prosecutorial discretion appears in the immigration statute, agency memoranda and c...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This Article examines the conflicting decisions of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth ...
This book analyses how the system of immigration judicial reviews works in practice, as an area whic...
Today, jurisdiction over immigration law is by no means well defined by clear limits. Limitations on...
Darkside Discretion refers to a situation where the noncitizen satisfies the statutory criteria set...