
Contents
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I. The Rise of Immigration Criminalization I. The Rise of Immigration Criminalization
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A. The Racially Charged Origins of Immigration Criminalization A. The Racially Charged Origins of Immigration Criminalization
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B. The Contemporary Surge in Immigration Prosecutions B. The Contemporary Surge in Immigration Prosecutions
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C. State and Local Immigration Intervention Laws C. State and Local Immigration Intervention Laws
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II. Broadening Crime-Based Grounds for Deportation II. Broadening Crime-Based Grounds for Deportation
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III. Broader Investigation and Detention Powers and Incentive to Blur Boundaries III. Broader Investigation and Detention Powers and Incentive to Blur Boundaries
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A. Investigation Controversies A. Investigation Controversies
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B. Detention Controversies B. Detention Controversies
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IV. Conclusion: A Future in Flux IV. Conclusion: A Future in Flux
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Notes Notes
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References References
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31 Case Study: Immigration, Social Exclusion, and Informal Economies: Muslim Immigrants in Frankfurt
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23 The Law of Immigration and Crime
Get accessMary Fan, University of Washington School of Law
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Published:01 October 2013
Cite
Abstract
Cycles of fear over perceived undesirables have fueled a thickening entanglement between immigration and criminal law in the United States. Surging criminalization and prosecution of immigration violations, expanding crime-related bases for exclusion and deportation, and the broadening powers to detain and investigate have reshaped the criminal law’s connections to immigration. Immigration law has increasingly permeated and permuted criminal law and procedure. Conversely, criminal-law consequences have transformed civil immigration law. Courts have pushed back on some of the dangers of fierce popular passions in the criminal immigration context. Ultimately, however, the future of this murky and precarious domain depends on finding a way to bridge fierce divides in the political branches.
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