Over the last decade, citizenship in the United States has become increasingly precarious. Denaturalization cases increased under President Obama and skyrocketed under President Trump. No number of years spent in the United States protects individuals against sudden accusations that they procured citizenship fraudulently or were never eligible for citizenship in the first place. Moreover, the government has challenged the citizenship status even of some individuals—largely from ethnic and religious minority communities—that the government had previously recognized as citizens for decades. If the U.S. justice system is committed to the values of reliance and finality, how can it permit citizenship to be challenged without any time limit? Ame...
Once an individual becomes a naturalized citizen, the U.S. government can revoke citizenship only up...
The subject of my remarks will be citizenship, or more precisely the lack thereof, as a wedge issue ...
For more than a decade, a single rubric for legalization of the 11 million undocumented people in th...
Over the last fifty years, naturalized citizens in the United States were able to feel a sense of fi...
By what standard of proof — and by what procedures — can the U.S. government challenge citizenship s...
Over the last fifty years, naturalized citizens in the United States were able to feel a sense of fi...
This Comment discusses the constitutional aspects of loss of United States citizenship. It contrasts...
It is not possible to police the movement of “aliens” without first determining who is and is not a ...
Comprehensive immigration reform is a popular topic in Congress. While many reform bills have been o...
In an age when perhaps the foremost concern of the legal profession is the status and protection of ...
Is citizenship status a legitimate basis for allocating rights in the United States? In immigration ...
This Article examines international law limitations on the ascription of citizenship and national se...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
When States Take Rights Back draws on contributions by international experts in history, law, politi...
Nationality is the legal bond between a person and a state that connotes full and equal membership o...
Once an individual becomes a naturalized citizen, the U.S. government can revoke citizenship only up...
The subject of my remarks will be citizenship, or more precisely the lack thereof, as a wedge issue ...
For more than a decade, a single rubric for legalization of the 11 million undocumented people in th...
Over the last fifty years, naturalized citizens in the United States were able to feel a sense of fi...
By what standard of proof — and by what procedures — can the U.S. government challenge citizenship s...
Over the last fifty years, naturalized citizens in the United States were able to feel a sense of fi...
This Comment discusses the constitutional aspects of loss of United States citizenship. It contrasts...
It is not possible to police the movement of “aliens” without first determining who is and is not a ...
Comprehensive immigration reform is a popular topic in Congress. While many reform bills have been o...
In an age when perhaps the foremost concern of the legal profession is the status and protection of ...
Is citizenship status a legitimate basis for allocating rights in the United States? In immigration ...
This Article examines international law limitations on the ascription of citizenship and national se...
Citizenship scholarship is pervasively organized around a binary concept: there is citizenship (whi...
When States Take Rights Back draws on contributions by international experts in history, law, politi...
Nationality is the legal bond between a person and a state that connotes full and equal membership o...
Once an individual becomes a naturalized citizen, the U.S. government can revoke citizenship only up...
The subject of my remarks will be citizenship, or more precisely the lack thereof, as a wedge issue ...
For more than a decade, a single rubric for legalization of the 11 million undocumented people in th...