Terry Greene Sterling enters the fearful ghettoes of Arizona, the gateway for nearly half of the nation's undocumented immigrants and the state that is the least welcoming toward them, to tell the stories of the men, women, and children who have crossed the border
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Intro -- ILLEGAL ALIENSENFORCEMENT AND RESTRICTIONS BY STATE AND LOCALITIES -- ILLEGAL ALIENSENFORCEMENT AND RESTRICTIONS BY STATE AND LOCALITIES -- CONTENTS -- PREFACE -- Chapter 1 AUTHORITY OF STATE AND LOCAL POLICE TO ENFORCE FEDERAL IMMIGRATION LAW -- SUMMARY -- INTRODUCTION -- EXPRESS AUTHORIZATION FOR STATE AND LOCAL LAW ENFORCEMENT OFFICERS TO ENFORCE FEDERAL IMMIGRATION LAW -- Delegation of Immigration Enforcement Authority via Cooperative Agreement under INA Section 287(g) -- Delegation of Immigration Enforcement Authority to Respond to Mass Influx of Aliens -- Authorization to Arrest and Detain Previously Removed Criminal Aliens -- Authorization to Enforce the Federal Alien Smuggling Statute -- APPELLATE COURT DECISIONS CONCERNING IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT -- Ninth Circuit Jurisprudence -- United States v. Urrieta (Sixth Circuit) -- Tenth Circuit Jurisprudence -- OFFICE OF LEGAL COUNSEL OPINIONS -- 2002 OLC Opinion -- Department of Justice Legal Challenges to State Immigration Laws -- End Notes -- Chapter 2 STATE AND LOCAL RESTRICTIONS ON EMPLOYING UNAUTHORIZED ALIENS -- SUMMARY -- INTRODUCTION -- BACKGROUND -- PRE-WHITING JURISPRUDENCE -- SUPREME COURT'S DECISION IN WHITING -- The Controlling Opinion -- Dissenting Opinions -- IMPLICATIONS -- End Notes -- Chapter 3 STATE AND LOCAL RESTRICTIONS ON EMPLOYING, RENTING PROPERTY TO, OR PROVIDING SERVICES FORUNAUTHORIZED ALIENS: LEGAL ISSUES AND RECENT JUDICIAL DEVELOPMENTS -- SUMMARY -- INTRODUCTION -- FACTUAL BACKGROUND -- RELEVANT IMMIGRATION-RELATED LEGAL ISSUES -- Preemption -- Equal Protection -- Procedural Due Process -- ISSUES RAISED BY STATE OR LOCAL RESTRICTIONS ON THE EMPLOYMENT OF UNAUTHORIZED ALIENS -- Preemption -- Procedural Due Process -- ISSUES RAISED BY STATE OR LOCAL RESTRICTIONS UPON TENANCY OR DWELLING -- Preemption -- Equal Protection -- Procedural Due Process
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US policymakers and the country's media erupted in a frenzy this summer over the issue of unaccompanied minors: Tens of thousands of youth from Central America, headlines proclaimed, will try to enter the US in 2014 alone. But how to define these youth remains hotly contested. Similar debates are happening in plenty of other countries, from Italy to Kenya to Australia. Yet the roots of dispute run particularly deep in the US, which, due to centuries of economic success, has absorbed tens of millions of immigrants. Long before Latino children became an issue, US leaders debated what to do with Chinese laborers, Eastern European radicals, even Africa slaves. In the process, the country played a pivotal role in defining the now-controversial term 'illegal alien.'. Adapted from the source document.
Odeh Mutawe Korian was late for his deportation hearing. His brother and an interpreter sat ill at ease in the chamber where the immigration judge and the government prosecutor exchanged annoyed glances as the minutes ticked by. At 9:15 A.M., fifteen minutes late, an unshaven, disheveled little man rushed in followed by two Immigration Service agents, nodded curtly at no one in particular, and slumped into a chair. He stared morosely at a spot on the table before him."Please remove your hat," the judge said. The little man reached up to tear off his beret without shifting his gaze, avoiding all the eyes fixed upon him.