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Throwback Thursday: When Immigrants Speak by Michael Kagan

Kagan_2016
I love a Throwback Thursday when I can find an accompanying throwback photo. This is Kagan in 2016 courtesy of the UNLV blog.

Today’s Throwback Thursday feature is When Immigrants Speak: The Precarious Status of Non-Citizen Speech under the First Amendment by Prof. Michael Kagan (UNLV). 57 B.C. L. Rev. 1237 (2016).

Here’s the abstract:

Although many unauthorized immigrants have become politically active in campaigning for immigration reform, their ability to speak out publicly may depend more on political discretion than on the constitutional protections that citizens normally take for granted. Potential threats to immigrant free speech may be seen in three areas of law. First, the Department of Justice has made a broad claim that immigrants who have not been legally admitted to the country have no First Amendment protection at all. Second, the Supreme Court has approved broad prohibitions on non-citizens spending money on speech that is related to electoral campaigns. Third, the Court has indicated that the federal government might, in its discretion, act to deport immigrants because of their political activities. The Supreme Court should revisit these questions because current case law is in tension with other principles of free speech law, especially the prohibition on identity-based speech restrictions as articulated in Citizens United v. FEC. As the Court explained, the First Amendment protects the rights of marginalized people to have a voice and does not allow the government to prefer some speakers over others based on their identity.

I found this article very helpful this week as I was contacted by OU Daily to talk about the fears that international students have regarding speaking out on the issues surrounding Palestine. Definitely worth a re-read!

-KitJ