Opinion | There Is No Line for Many Immigrants Who Want to Come Here Legally. We’ve Got to Fix Our System.
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Until last year, I was one of 4.3 million people at the mercy of the legal immigration system, waiting for the chance to stay in the U.S. for good.
This volume, part of the Feminist Judgment Series, shows how feminist legal theory along with critical race theory and intersectional modes of critique might transform immigration law. Here, a diverse collection of scholars and lawyers bring critical feminist, race, and intersectional insights to Supreme Court opinions. Feminist reasoning values the perspectives of outsiders, exposes the deep-rooted bias in the legal opinions of courts, and illuminates the effects of ostensibly neutral policies that create and maintain oppression and hierarchy. One by one, the chapters reimagine the norms that drive immigration policies and practices. In place of discrimination and subordination, the authors demand welcome and equality. Where current law omits the voice and stories of noncitizens, the authors center their lives and experiences. Collectively, they reveal how a feminist vision of immigration law could center a commitment to equality and justice and foster a country where diverse newcomers readily flourish with dignity.
In a pivotal day for the fate of President Trump's executive order limiting the ability of travelers from predominately Muslim countries to visit the
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Pinto is an attorney and Immigrant Legal Defense’s founding co-executive director, overseeing the group’s legal-education partnership with the California State University system, a uniq…
Around 115 women fighting for justice were arrested while rallying on Capitol Hill for immigration reform on the 12th of September. The New York Times
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President Biden will deliver bold action and immediate relief for American families as the country grapples with converging crises. This will include
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