LAW 6718: Immigration and Criminal Law: Immigration Consequences of Crimes and Criminalizing Migration

2 Credits

In the last decade, there has been an increased emphasis on using the criminal justice system to help determine who is and who is not suitable to live and work in the United States. This phenomenon has had some increasingly interesting effects as the immigration apparatus has been for most of the history of the United States a civil and agency system. The increased reliance on the criminal justice system has caused some overlap of criminal justice norms- including concepts of right to counsel, detention and detainers and warrants. At the same time, the prosecution of federal migration crimes has skyrocketed in the same period to the point where the majority of all federal prisoners are imprisoned because of migration crimes.

View on University Catalog

All Instructors

A- Average (3.722)Most Common: A (52%)

This total also includes data from semesters with unknown instructors.

42 students
FDCBA
  • 4.35

    /5

    Recommend
  • 4.35

    /5

    Effort
  • 4.49

    /5

    Understanding
  • 4.38

    /5

    Interesting
  • 4.48

    /5

    Activities


      Contribute on our Github

      Gopher Grades is maintained by Social Coding with data from Summer 2017 to Fall 2023 provided by the Office of Institutional Data and Research

      Privacy Policy