488 research outputs found

    Book Review

    Get PDF

    The Time Has Come for the United States to Ratify the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women

    Get PDF
    Part II examines the remarkable venom that runs through much of the American narrative about CEDAW. It is odd that a United Nations convention would produce that reaction, but it is evident from the rants in the lowliest blogs to the statements made in the highest reaches of government. Part III develops the notion of American Exceptionalism more fully, as it helps to explain much of the substantive content of that narrative. This part explores the sentiment justifying why CEDAW and those who implement it have been so deeply criticized: it is an international product, overseen and implemented by those from elsewhere

    Judicial Review of Discretionary Immigration Decisionmaking

    Get PDF
    The Immigration and Nationality Act vests enormous discretion in the Attorney General and subordinates, such discretion exercised frequently at all levels of the immigration system. Despite this, though, judicial review of these decisions has followed a very uneven, troubled course. This Article explores the reasons for this, focusing first on the Administrative Procedure Act and the elusive meaning of discretion itself. The author demonstrates the disintegration of administrative law and what he sees as the failure of its general precepts to accommodate immigration issues. The Article traces the development of faulty doctrine through case law, resulting in a stunted judicial review. The author recommends developing a more particularized approach to judicial review to afford aliens effective access to our legal system

    Redefining Refugee: A Proposal for Relief for the Victims of Civil Strife

    Get PDF
    This Article examines the legal protections afforded by immigration law for victims of civil strife. Using the displaced victims of civil strife in El Salvador as an example, the author examines the predicament of such victims, surveys various solutions that exist under current law, and concludes that United States immigration law fails to offer relief or remedy. In light of these deficiencies, the author proposes that current asylum law be amended to redefine refugee to include victims of civil strife in order to further humanitarian goals

    Isles of Boshen : Edward Lear's literary nonsense in context

    Get PDF
    This thesis investigates three major areas in the background of Edward Lear's literary nonsense: the parodic relationship with text and genre of early children's literature, the trends behind Lear's innovative illustration style, and the "nonsense" child construct manifest within the genre, which I claim is, in many ways, an expression of the Romantic conception of the child. The first chapter explores the parodic basis of nonsense. Most literary nonsense is referential; it often begins by inhabiting a genre or individual work, but what it does to the original is debatable. Some critics see nonsense as parody, while others claim that nonsense precludes parody in its intentional purposelessness. In this chapter I explore the critical debate surrounding parody in nonsense, and parody in general. I then examine the works of Lear, and some Carroll, looking first at their genuine, clear parodies. Next, I look at the many borderline cases of parody which use nonsense as a device but are not overshadowed by it. Finally, I discuss the more "pure" literary nonsense which, I argue, goes beyond parody to establish a new genre. The next chapter looks at the background of Lear's nonsense illustration. His style of illustration was a widely original combination of devices which are best seen in the context of the children's book illustrations of his day. With Bewick's innovations in woodcuts, the quality of children's illustrations had drastically improved. Diverging from this trend, Lear's illustrations hearken back to the rough chapbooks which he probably read as a child. His child-like style, coupled with an expert draughtsman's eye, began a rival tradition of children's book illustration. His illustrations are in way caricatures of chapbooks. His text and illustrations, like those of Blake and Hood, are integral, and their self-reflexiveness with the verses places them in an altogether different class of illustration

    Due Process Limits on Accomplice Liability

    Get PDF

    Management Approaches to Addressing Takings Issues: Endangered Species Protection

    Get PDF
    15 pages. Contains footnotes
    corecore