This article considers a “Declaration on the Rights of Expelled and Deported Persons.” Drafted by the authors with significant input from a wide array of scholars, activists, judges, and others, this Declaration, re-printed in Appendix A, responds to what has become in recent years a major worldwide phenomenon: The deportation (also known as removal or expulsion) of large numbers of noncitizens. Our aim, first, is to describe that phenomenon and to illustrate some of its most troubling features. We then survey existing legal structures and mechanisms that seek to protect some of the rights of the deported, both during and after removal. Our focus is primarily in the United States and Europe, though we also consider aspects of international ...
Long ago when it was unnecessary to restrict the number of aliens entering the United States, there ...
Fundamental civil and humanitarian rights are being denied to individuals in the United States becau...
How can international law better protect both international security and the human rights of people ...
This article considers a “Declaration on the Rights of Expelled and Deported Persons.” Drafted by th...
This article offers a critical assessment of the interpretative positions adopted by the European Co...
The United States is still in the midst of a massive deportation experiment that is exceptionally sw...
Last year 245,424 noncitizens were removed from the United States, and courts played virtually no ro...
The right of States, for a variety of reasons, to expel aliens has never been disputed by the Europe...
This article discusses recently enacted changes to U.S. immigration law allowing for deportation of ...
It continues to be a basic premise of international law, just like it was the case fifty years ago, ...
In this article I explore why, despite the fact that it seems to represent the epitome of forced mig...
Taking the growing use of deportation by many states, including the UK and the USA, as its point of ...
Although the treatment of aliens by state authorities has been consistently under the scrutiny of th...
This article considers the basis and limit of the constitutional power to deport aliens who have bec...
How can international law protect both international security and the human rights of displaced peop...
Long ago when it was unnecessary to restrict the number of aliens entering the United States, there ...
Fundamental civil and humanitarian rights are being denied to individuals in the United States becau...
How can international law better protect both international security and the human rights of people ...
This article considers a “Declaration on the Rights of Expelled and Deported Persons.” Drafted by th...
This article offers a critical assessment of the interpretative positions adopted by the European Co...
The United States is still in the midst of a massive deportation experiment that is exceptionally sw...
Last year 245,424 noncitizens were removed from the United States, and courts played virtually no ro...
The right of States, for a variety of reasons, to expel aliens has never been disputed by the Europe...
This article discusses recently enacted changes to U.S. immigration law allowing for deportation of ...
It continues to be a basic premise of international law, just like it was the case fifty years ago, ...
In this article I explore why, despite the fact that it seems to represent the epitome of forced mig...
Taking the growing use of deportation by many states, including the UK and the USA, as its point of ...
Although the treatment of aliens by state authorities has been consistently under the scrutiny of th...
This article considers the basis and limit of the constitutional power to deport aliens who have bec...
How can international law protect both international security and the human rights of displaced peop...
Long ago when it was unnecessary to restrict the number of aliens entering the United States, there ...
Fundamental civil and humanitarian rights are being denied to individuals in the United States becau...
How can international law better protect both international security and the human rights of people ...