597 research outputs found
The ICE Storm in U.S. Homes: An Urgent Call for Policy Change
Since its creation in 2003, the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) has used increasingly aggressive tactics to enforce U.S. immigration law. One of ICE\u27s most prominent enforcement initiatives is its practice of raiding the homes of immigrants. Accounts of home raids from victims all over the country reveal a pattern of practice that differs widely from ICE\u27s official statements regarding raids. This paper establishes that although immigration officials are governed by the Fourth Amendment when conducting home raids, ICE\u27s agents nonetheless regularly violate the Constitution when carrying out home raids. Additionally, this paper argues that the number and nature of these constitutional violations, combined with the social costs of the raids, present a compelling case for policy change. The paper concludes with a series of policy proposals that would rectify the profound invasions of privacy and degrading treatment many immigrants in this country are currently experiencing
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Re L (Contact: Domestic Violence; Re V (Contact: Domestic Violence; Re M (Contact:Domestic Violence; Re H (Contact: Domestic Violence)
This is the post-print version of the article
Democratic Transitions and the Future of Asylum Law
The United States\u27s commitment to protecting refugees is dying a slow death. Two developments have contributed to its demise. The first, widely heralded, is the United States Congress\u27s evisceration of procedural safeguards such as judicial review. The second development is more insidious: expansion of the asylum law doctrine, which holds that changed country conditions can defeat an otherwise valid asylum claim. In an age in which democracy seems triumphant throughout the world, the combination of severely curtailed judicial review and mechanical application of the changed conditions doctrine relegates refugees, as well as asylum law itself, to an uncertain future.\u27 This article argues that the rise of the changed country conditions doctrine stems from judicial and administrative confusion about both the role of both subjective and objective factors in asylum law and the nature of democratic transitions
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Re L (A child) (Contact: Domestic violence): Commentary by Christine Piper, Judgement by Felicity Kaganas
The full and final version of this article is available in the published book.This is an judgment in a book of feminist judgments. It is an alternative judgment, written from a feminist perspective, of a leading decision setting out the approach to be adopted in cases of disputed child contact in cases involving allegations of domestic violence. It aims to provide a challenge to the reasoning of the judges in that case and to demonstrate that a different perspective could have led to different reasoning that would have better protected the interests of women and children
Evolution of superconductivity in PrFe1-xCoxAsO with x = 0.0 to 1.0
We report the synthesis and physical property characterization of
PrFe1-xCoxAsO with x = 0.0 to 1.0. The studied samples are synthesized by solid
state reaction route via vacuum encapsulation method. The pristine compound
PrFeAsO does not show superconductivity, but rather exhibits a metallic step
like transition due to spin density wave ordering of Fe moments below 150 K,
followed by another upward step due to anomalous ordering of Pr moments at 12
K. Both the Fe-SDW and Pr-TN temperatures decrease monotonically with Co
substitution at Fe site. Superconductivity appears in a narrow range of x from
0.07 to 0.25 with maximum Tc at 11.12 K for x = 0.15. Samples, with x = 0.25
exhibit metallic behavior right from 300 K down to 2 K, without any Fe-SDW or
Pr-TN steps in resistivity. In fact, though Fe-SDW decreases monotonically, the
Pr-TN is disappeared even with x = 0.02. The magneto transport measurements
below 14 Tesla on superconducting polycrystalline Co doped PrFeAsO lead to
extrapolated values of the upper critical fields [Hc2(0)] of up to 60 Tesla.Comment: 15 pages Text+Fig
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