UCLA Law Review Symposium: Criminal Law and Immigration Law: Defining the Outsider
Here is the Table of contents of the current issue of the UCLA Law Review:
Symposium: Criminal Law and Immigration Law: Defining the Outsider Articles
Introduction Rachel F. Moran
Why Padilla Doesn’t Matter (Much) Darryl K. Brown
Illegal Entry as Crime, Deportation as Punishment: Immigration Status and the Criminal Process Gabriel J. Chin
The Right to Deportation Counsel in Padilla v. Kentucky: The Challenging Construction of the Fifth-and-a-Half Amendment Daniel Kanstroom
Padilla and the Delivery of Integrated Criminal Defense Ronald F. Wright
Undocumented Criminal Procedure Devon W. Carbado Cheryl I. Harris
Litigation at Work: Defending Day Labor in Los Angeles Scott L. Cummings
Doing Time: Crimmigration Law and the Perils of Haste Juliet P. Stumpf
Local Immigration Prosecution: A Study of Arizona Before SB 1070 Ingrid V. Eagly
The Discretion That Matters: Federal Immigration Enforcement, State and Local Arrests, and the Civil-Criminal Line Hiroshi Motomura
COMMENT
Moving Toward Subfederal Involvement in Federal Immigration Law Ryan Terrance Chin
KJ