Since 2004, the United States has seen a flurry of state and local laws dealing with unauthorized immigrants. Though initially restrictionist, these laws have recently undergone a dramatic shift toward promoting integration. How are we to make sense of this new immigration federalism? What are its causes? And what are its consequences for the federal-state balance of power? In The New Immigration Federalism, Professors Pratheepan Gulasekaram and S. Karthick Ramakrishnan provide answers to these questions using a mix of quantitative, historical, and doctrinal legal analysis. In so doing they refute the popular “demographic necessity” argument put forward by anti-immigrant activists and politicians. Instead, they posit that immigration federa...
In this Article, Professor Michael Wishnie addresses the current pressing problem of denial of benef...
In the debate over U. S. immigration, all sides now support policy and practice that expand the para...
Immigration is a national issue and a federal responsibility — so why are states so actively involve...
What can the new federalism teach us about what is happening in immigration law? The changing relati...
This Article provides a systematic, empirical investigation of the genesis of state and local immigr...
Ever since Justice Louis Brandeis characterized states as laboratories of democracy, judges and scho...
Over the last decade states passed hundreds of immigration bills covering a range of policy areas. T...
The proliferation of state and local regulation designed to control immigrant movement generated con...
This Article identifies how the current spate of state and local regulation is changing the way elec...
The current debate over the meaning of American federalism bears a striking resemblance to our found...
This analysis will seek to provide data on the modern topic of immigration federalism and will exami...
This symposium essay takes as its starting point the contestable position that some degree of immigr...
Two of the most important legal trends of recent years have been the dramatic changes in the nation\...
In a unique corner of immigration law, a significant reallocation of power over immigration has been...
Since 2002, state and local governments have passed many laws and ordinances designed to regulate im...
In this Article, Professor Michael Wishnie addresses the current pressing problem of denial of benef...
In the debate over U. S. immigration, all sides now support policy and practice that expand the para...
Immigration is a national issue and a federal responsibility — so why are states so actively involve...
What can the new federalism teach us about what is happening in immigration law? The changing relati...
This Article provides a systematic, empirical investigation of the genesis of state and local immigr...
Ever since Justice Louis Brandeis characterized states as laboratories of democracy, judges and scho...
Over the last decade states passed hundreds of immigration bills covering a range of policy areas. T...
The proliferation of state and local regulation designed to control immigrant movement generated con...
This Article identifies how the current spate of state and local regulation is changing the way elec...
The current debate over the meaning of American federalism bears a striking resemblance to our found...
This analysis will seek to provide data on the modern topic of immigration federalism and will exami...
This symposium essay takes as its starting point the contestable position that some degree of immigr...
Two of the most important legal trends of recent years have been the dramatic changes in the nation\...
In a unique corner of immigration law, a significant reallocation of power over immigration has been...
Since 2002, state and local governments have passed many laws and ordinances designed to regulate im...
In this Article, Professor Michael Wishnie addresses the current pressing problem of denial of benef...
In the debate over U. S. immigration, all sides now support policy and practice that expand the para...
Immigration is a national issue and a federal responsibility — so why are states so actively involve...