Celebrating Immprof Books & Book Chapters of 2024
Vincent Le Moign, CC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons
The best way to celebrate the last day of 2024 is with a look back at the wonderful things that immigration law professors published this year.
Here are some of the book chapters that immprofs published:
- Jennifer Chacón (Stanford), Chapter 3: “Crimmigration”: race, and Critical Race Theory in the United States, in Handbook on Border Criminology
- Jennifer Chacón (Stanford), Chapter 31: The Dehumanizing Work of Immigration Law, in Excessive Punishment: How the Justice System Creates Mass Incarceration
- Craig Mousin, Nonrefoulement: Responding to Asylum-seekers through the Prism of Subversive Stories: A Study of Three Trials of Innocence, in Furthering Interfaith Biblical Scholarship: A Festschrift in Memory of André LaCocque
- Craig Mousin, A Migrant 4 Life Journeys to the New Tower of Babel: Christianity and Immigration, in Abrahamic Hospitality and Its Contemporary Implications
- Bijal Shah (Boston College), Executive Influence on Federal Administrative Adjudication, in A Guide to Federal Agency Adjudication (3d ed.)
And here are some of the books published by immprofs in 2024:
- Jennifer Chacón (Stanford), Stephen Lee (UC Irvine), and Susan Coutin (UC Irvine), Legal Phantoms: The Haunting Failures of Immigration Law (Stanford UP)
- Lindsay Harris (USF), How to Account for Trauma and Emotions in Law Teaching (Edward Elgar)
- César Cuauhtémoc García Hernández (Ohio State), Welcome the Wretched: In Defense of the “Criminal Alien” (The New Press)
- Kit Johnson (Oklahoma), Crimmigration Law: An Open Casebook
- Steve Legomsky (Wash U) Change and Delusion
- Rubén G. Rumbaut (UC Irvine) Immigrant America: A Portrait (5th ed)
- Ragini Shah (Suffolk), Constructed Movements: Extraction and Resistance in Mexican Migrant Communities (UC Press)
- Rebecca Sharpless (Miami), Shackled: 92 Refugees Imprisoned on ICE Air (UC Press)
-KitJ
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