996 research outputs found

    Golden Gate Lawyer, Fall 2010

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    California Wellness Foundation - 1998 Annual Report

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    Contains board chair and president's message, a review of the Violence Prevention Initiative, program information, grants highlights, grants list, and lists of board members and staff

    USD Magazine Summer 1999 14.4

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    Seen in The Park; Contents; Alcala Almanac; Playing Hardball; Chemistry Habit; A Worldly Experience; A Bumper Crop; Outer Limits; Alumni Gallery; Calendar; Parting Shothttps://digital.sandiego.edu/usdmagazine/1021/thumbnail.jp

    Hastings Community (Winter 2005)

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    https://repository.uchastings.edu/alumni_mag/1120/thumbnail.jp

    Golden Gate Lawyer, Fall/Winter 2007

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    The Papers of Professor Emeritus Jerome Krase

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    Jerome Krase, professor of sociology at Brooklyn College from 1970-2003 and chair of the sociology department twice, taught classes in urban sociology, inter-ethnic group relations and introductory courses. For three decades, he worked as a community activist-scholar and was a student of ordinary urban neighborhood life by lecturing, giving photographic exhibitions, and writing for alternative newspapers. He lectured and did research at Universities of Perugia, Pisa, Trento, and Trieste. Dr Krase was a visiting professor at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow and the University of Rome, La Sapienza. He retired from Brooklyn College in Spring 2003

    REFRAMING CREDIBLE FEAR IN AN AGE OF RESTRICTIONISM: AN ANALYSIS OF THE SURGE IN ASYLUM SEEKERS AT THE U.S./MEXICO BORDER

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    Starting in 2013, the number of people requesting asylum via the credible fear program at the border between the United States and Mexico began to rapidly increase. Congress held a series of hearings during which politicians and other witnesses claimed that the surge was due to asylum seekers committing fraud en masse. This thesis reviews the literature and available data regarding asylum fraud to determine whether the claims of fraud in the credible fear program hold merit. This thesis also employs bivariate correlations and regression analyses to estimate the relationships between the number of credible fear receipts from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico and a selection of independent variables that measure conditions in those countries, U.S. and Mexican policy decisions, and other migration and benefit types. The review and statistical analyses suggest that the generalized claim of fraud does not satisfactorily explain the surge in credible fear receipts over the previous 10 years. Instead, the results suggest that the surge consisted of people genuinely seeking protection and that each country in this study has a unique set of variables that best explain credible fear receipts from that country alone. This thesis recommends that the U.S. government rely on statistical modeling to prepare for the fluctuations in the number of asylum seekers and to identify and help resolve the underlying factors that cause increases in people fleeing their countries.Civilian, Department of Homeland SecurityApproved for public release. Distribution is unlimited
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