LAW 5072:
Crimes and Immigration
Fall 2024 • Section 21
• CRN 45325
Course offerings for are still tentative. The information below is subject to change.
Course Description
Non-citizens who have contact with the criminal justice system face a range of unique consequences, including arrest by immigration authorities, deportation, and detention without a bond hearing. This course explores multiple points of intersection between criminal law and immigration law. Topics include the immigration consequences of criminal convictions, the constitutional limitations on detention and deportation of non-citizens with convictions, and the federal government’s use of state and local criminal justice systems to enforce immigration laws. This course will familiarize students with the substantive law necessary to represent clients facing the immigration consequences of criminal convictions in both the criminal and immigration systems. It will also give students the opportunity to discuss the policy implications of predicating immigration consequences on a criminal justice system that disparately impacts poor people and people of color. The course will also familiarize students with the role constitutional law and the federal courts should play in limiting the political branches’ power over non-citizens with convictions.
Schedule
Day/Time | Location |
---|---|
T 6:00-7:50 PM | Klein 7A |
Registration Info
No Registration Restrictions.