Coriolan liberalized current interpretations of immigration law by relaxing, somewhat, the evidentiary burden facing the alien seeking political refuge in the United States. The concepts articulated in Coriolan provide a more humanitarian approach for refugees and are the key to a more realistic interpretation of the law
This Article examines the exercise of administrative discretion under the immigration laws under pra...
Both Canada and the United States are bound through the United Nations Protocol Relating to the Stat...
The unprecedented exodus of political refugees from countries dominated by tyrannical regimes has po...
The recent influx into the United States of approximately 130,000 South Vietnamese refugees makes ap...
The Cold War era brought a shift in United States refugee policy from an emphasis on domestic policy...
Long ago when it was unnecessary to restrict the number of aliens entering the United States, there ...
To receive asylum in the United States, persons must show that they are refugees. They do so by de...
This Comment analyzes the different interpretations of the well-founded fear of persecution standa...
A review of immigration law and history reveals that the United States admits large numbers of refug...
With the passage of the Refugee Act of 1980, the United States took an important step toward fulfill...
The author discusses the legal status of the refugee under two decades of American and internation...
The opportunity to gain permanent solace in the United States is desirable for millions of refugees ...
Stranded within the disquieting paradox of immigration, the constitutional right of an alien to seek...
During the height of the Central American civil wars of the 1980s, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal...
A refugee leaves the country of his or her national origin because the political community will not ...
This Article examines the exercise of administrative discretion under the immigration laws under pra...
Both Canada and the United States are bound through the United Nations Protocol Relating to the Stat...
The unprecedented exodus of political refugees from countries dominated by tyrannical regimes has po...
The recent influx into the United States of approximately 130,000 South Vietnamese refugees makes ap...
The Cold War era brought a shift in United States refugee policy from an emphasis on domestic policy...
Long ago when it was unnecessary to restrict the number of aliens entering the United States, there ...
To receive asylum in the United States, persons must show that they are refugees. They do so by de...
This Comment analyzes the different interpretations of the well-founded fear of persecution standa...
A review of immigration law and history reveals that the United States admits large numbers of refug...
With the passage of the Refugee Act of 1980, the United States took an important step toward fulfill...
The author discusses the legal status of the refugee under two decades of American and internation...
The opportunity to gain permanent solace in the United States is desirable for millions of refugees ...
Stranded within the disquieting paradox of immigration, the constitutional right of an alien to seek...
During the height of the Central American civil wars of the 1980s, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeal...
A refugee leaves the country of his or her national origin because the political community will not ...
This Article examines the exercise of administrative discretion under the immigration laws under pra...
Both Canada and the United States are bound through the United Nations Protocol Relating to the Stat...
The unprecedented exodus of political refugees from countries dominated by tyrannical regimes has po...