This Article examines the exercise of administrative discretion under the immigration laws under practical considerations. In terms of human misery, the potential impact of our immigration laws can hardly be overstated. With minor exceptions, the immigration laws operate directly and exclusively upon human beings whose hopes for future happiness in a realistic sense frequently depend on their ability to enter, or remain in, this land of freedom and opportunity. The statutes themselves contain a built-in potential for hardship which is to some extent unavoidable. To afford some opportunity for relief from the hardships that inevitably result from the application of laws thus cast in inflexible terms, Congress has through the years provided a...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
The Immigration and Nationality Act vests enormous discretion in the Attorney General and subordinat...
This article is about the statutory relief available to some aliens whose violation of immigration l...
This Article addresses the impact of Operations Instructions, promulgated by the United States Immig...
The concept of prosecutorial discretion appears in the immigration statute, agency memoranda and c...
This article discusses judicial review in immigration cases. The author states that the courts are t...
This Article examines the general principles relating to detention of aliens in exclusion and deport...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
This Article explores four different actions which could be utilized by practitioners in defense of ...
Congressional amendments to the immigration code in the 1990s significantly broadened grounds for re...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
Immigration adjudication is more diverse than it may seem. Scholars tend to focus on one aspect of a...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...
The Immigration and Nationality Act vests enormous discretion in the Attorney General and subordinat...
This article is about the statutory relief available to some aliens whose violation of immigration l...
This Article addresses the impact of Operations Instructions, promulgated by the United States Immig...
The concept of prosecutorial discretion appears in the immigration statute, agency memoranda and c...
This article discusses judicial review in immigration cases. The author states that the courts are t...
This Article examines the general principles relating to detention of aliens in exclusion and deport...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
This Article explores four different actions which could be utilized by practitioners in defense of ...
Congressional amendments to the immigration code in the 1990s significantly broadened grounds for re...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
Immigration adjudication is more diverse than it may seem. Scholars tend to focus on one aspect of a...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This article considers the problems raised by a federal law--the “REAL ID Act”--that seeks to preclu...
In immigration law, executive discretion has become contested terrain. Courts, officials, and schola...
This Article examines the limits of discretion in asylum adjudications. The author describes recent ...