Results for 'trump'
Presidential Administration and the Durability of Climate-Consciousness
President Trump’s two executive orders nevertheless eliminated some of the fourth pillar’s core provisions. The Trump Administration has also
Certification as Sabotage: Lessons from Guantánamo Bay
3d 925, 929 (8th Cir. 2016) (noting that the U.S. Citizenship and Immigra… Mark Landler & David E. Sanger, Trump Disavows Nuclear Deal, But Doesn’t
The Attorney General’s Settlement Authority and the Separation of Powers
protests erupted against the Trump Administration because of a new family-separation policy. The Administration (erroneously) blamed the Clinton-era
Forum: What About #UsToo?: The Invisibility of Race in the #MeToo Movement
; Heather Timmons, The Dangerous Way the Trump Administration Talks About Black Women, Quartz (Oct. 23, 2017), https://qz.com/1107990/trumps-attacks-on
Forum: Abolish ICE . . . and Then What?
needed. The Trump Administration’s policy of separating and detaining parents and children and the upset victory of U.S. Representative Alexandria
Forum: Is Korematsu Good Law?
The Yale Law Journal - Forum: Is Korematsu Good Law? Is Korematsu Good Law? abstract. In Trump v. Hawaii, the Supreme Court claimed to overrule its
The Invention of Immigration Exceptionalism
of immigration law’s foundations. See Trump v. Hawaii, 585 U.S. 667, 702-05 (2018) (holding that President Trump’s anti-Muslim sta… See, e.g., Garrett
Korematsu in the Court of History: Seventy-Five Years Later
Korematsus legacy for national security law, race, and equal protection, and explores what Korematsu means today in light of its formal overruling in Trump
Forum: Detention and Deterrence: Insights from the Early Years of Immigration Detention at the Border
Insights from the Early Years of Immigration Detention at the Border abstract:Throughout the past several years, in the Trump and Obama
Forum: The Separation of National Security Powers: Lessons from the Second Congress
the Trump Administration, which has been willing to push those authorizing statutes to, if not beyond, their limits. All of this should provoke—and