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The Accidental History of the U.S. Immigration Courts

War, Fear, and the Roots of Dysfunction

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
How the immigration courts became part of the nation's law enforcement agency—and how to reshape them.
During the Trump administration, the immigration courts were decried as more politicized enforcement weapon than impartial tribunal. Yet few people are aware of a fundamental flaw in the system that has long pre-dated that administration: The immigration courts are not really "courts" at all but an office of the Department of Justice—the nation's law enforcement agency.

This original and surprising diagnosis shows how paranoia sparked by World War II and the War on Terror drove the structure of the immigration courts. Focusing on previously unstudied decisions in the Roosevelt and Bush administrations, the narrative laid out in this book divulges both the human tragedy of our current immigration court system and the human crises that led to its creation. Moving the reader from understanding to action, Alison Peck offers a lens through which to evaluate contemporary bills and proposals to reform our immigration court system. Peck provides an accessible legal analysis of recent events to make the case for independent immigration courts, proposing that the courts be moved into an independent, Article I court system. As long as the immigration courts remain under the authority of the attorney general, the administration of immigration justice will remain a game of political football—with people's very lives on the line.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 19, 2021
      West Virginia University law professor Peck debuts with an eye-opening look at how the history and structure of U.S. immigration courts contribute to present-day problems. Unlike the Supreme Court and other courts of the federal judiciary, immigration courts are housed within the Department of Justice and overseen by the attorney general, a political appointee who can overrule immigration judges “at any time, in any case.” Peck documents how political pressure and overhyped fears of a “fifth column” of Nazi supporters in the U.S. led President Roosevelt to shift immigration and naturalization services from the Labor Department to the Justice Department in 1940, and laments that when the Department of Homeland Security was created in the wake of 9/11, an opportunity for reform was missed. She spotlights attorney general Jeff Sessions’s controversial 2018 opinion overruling the granting of asylum to a victim of domestic violence from El Salvador as an example of how the current system creates confusion by allowing decisions to be “based on politics rather than law,” and calls on Congress to pass legislation creating a fully independent immigration court system. Supported with lucid legal analysis and incisive historical details, this is a persuasive call for change.

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  • English

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