Version: January 11, 2019 (subject to change) Course: Immigration Law, LAW 726-550 Instructor: Elizabeth Keyes ekeyes@ubalt.edu Room 432 (in clinic suite; entrance is through the second floor clinic reception area) Office Hours: Please sign up on TWEN. If no one signs up, I reserve the right to cancel the office hour for that day. If none of the times on TWEN work, please email me for more options! Days/Time: Tuesday and Thursday, 4:45-6pm. I commit to ending class promptly; you must commit to arriving on time. Location: Once the semester begins, check the Law School class schedule for the room assignment, as the room is subject to change. COURSE DESCRIPTION An introduction to the laws dealing with noncitizens, from temporary visitors to permanent residents, and from undocumented persons to refugees. The course includes: an examination of the constitutional and statutory provisions and the underlying policies; procedures dealing with specific immigration issues; grounds for being admitted or deported; acquisition and loss of American citizenship; and policy priorities underlying all of the above. COURSE MATERIALS (REQUIRED) 1. RICHARD BOSWELL, ESSENTIALS OF IMMIGRATION LAW (4TH ED.). ISBN-10: 1573704032. ISBN-13: 978-1573704038 2. IMMIGRATION AND NATIONALITY ACT 2018 (AILA). ISBN-13: 978-1-57370-423-6 ISBN-10: 1-57370-423-7 All other course materials will be available on TWEN. 1
Version: January 11, 2019 (subject to change) STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES By the end of the semester, students will be able to: Compare the laws concerning admission of immigrants to those governing the removal of immigrants; Evaluate how sections of the immigration statute to apply to particular immigration problems; Explain how different sections of the immigration statute relate to each other; Distinguish the legal significance of such categories as citizens, immigrants (various categories), nonimmigrants (various categories), and distinguish between admissibility and deportability; Explain why a state criminal conviction would or would not make a noncitizen removable; Explain the immigration decision-making processes within the Departments of State, Homeland Security, and Justice; and Imagine improvements to the immigration law to achieve different administrative goals like efficiency, transparency and procedural fairness. GRADES 15%: Immigration Court Visit and Reflection Memo. Due by March 5, 2019 at 4pm. Submit by email to ekeyes@ubalt.edu). Instructions for the assignment will be posted to TWEN. 25% Midterm Exam. There will be an open-book/open-note midterm exam consisting of multiple choice questions and short answers. Tentative date is February 26, 2019. 60%: Final Exam. There will be an open-book/open-note final exam consisting of a mix of short answers and longer essays. The final exam will be cumulative. I reserve the right to adjust a grade upwards for excellent participation (from a B to a B+, for example, or an A- to an A). Likewise, I reserve the right to adjust a grade downwards for students who are frequently absent or unprepared. 2
Version: January 11, 2019 (subject to change) COURSE EXPECTATIONS Hours: American Bar Association Accreditation Standards establish guidelines for the amount of work students should expect to complete for each credit earned. Students should expect approximately one hour of classroom instruction and two hours of out-ofclass work for each credit earned in a class, or an equivalent amount of work for other academic activities, such as simulations, externships, clinical supervision, co-curricular activities, and other academic work leading to the award of credit hours. For this course, you should expect an average of six hours weekly of work outside of the classroom; some weeks may be slightly less, others more. Attendance: Class attendance is a primary obligation of each student whose right to continued enrollment in the course and to take the examination is conditioned upon a record of attendance satisfactory to the professor. A student who exceeds the maximum allowed absences (5) may be compelled to withdraw from the course, or may be barred from sitting for the final exam. Students who are forced to withdraw for exceeding the allowed absences may receive a grade of FA (failure due to excessive absence). This policy is consistent with American Bar Association Standards for Law Schools. Participation: This course will work best if our examination of the materials we will study includes a considerable amount of lively and thoughtful class discussion, in which a broad cross-section of the class takes part, rather than the same few each day. To encourage the conditions for such class discussions, I will divide the class into four groups (A, B, C, D), each of which will be on call as noted with the readings. You are also encouraged to voluntarily participate on those days when you are not on call. When you are on call, I will expect you to be prepared to discuss and explain all the readings for that day. COURSE WEBSITE This course has a TWEN page that links to this syllabus, announcements, the class assignments, and other class materials. You are responsible for self-enrolling in the TWEN page and for checking it regularly for course information. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY Students are obligated to refrain from acts that they know or, under the circumstances, have reason to know will impair the academic integrity of the University and/or School of 3
Version: January 11, 2019 (subject to change) Law. Violations of academic integrity include, but are not limited to: cheating, plagiarism, misuse of materials, inappropriate communication about exams, use of unauthorized materials and technology, misrepresentation of any academic matter, including attendance, and impeding the Honor Code process. The School of Law Honor Code and information about the process is available at http://law.ubalt.edu/academics/policiesandprocedures/honor_code/. TITLE IX SEXUAL MISCONDUCT AND NONDISCRIMINATION POLICY The University of Baltimore s Sexual Misconduct and Nondiscrimination policy is compliant with Federal laws prohibiting discrimination. Title IX requires that faculty, student employees and staff members report to the university any known, learned or rumored incidents of sex discrimination, including sexual harassment, sexual misconduct, stalking on the basis of sex, dating/intimate partner violence or sexual exploitation and/or related experiences or incidents. Policies and procedures related to Title IX and UB s nondiscrimination policies can be found at: http://www.ubalt.edu/titleix. DISABILITY POLICY If you are a student with a documented disability who requires an academic accommodation, please contact Karyn Schultz, at 410-837-4141. COURSE ROADMAP & ASSIGNMENTS These assignments are subject to change; I will notify you in class if the syllabus changes, and will post any revised syllabus to TWEN promptly. 4
Version: January 11, 2019 (subject to change) Roadmap We begin with the broadest questions, which also happen to be the most constitutionally urgent questions: who belongs in our society? What is the extent of the government s power to regulate migration? And who within government holds which parts of that power? By Class 4 (approximately), we turn to the main immigration statute, the Immigration and Nationality Act, and work our way through major provisions to understand its structure and the content of modern immigration law (including family-based, employment-based, and humanitarian immigration). In the second half of the semester, we turn to the concepts of admissibility and deportability, and pay particular attention to the intersection of the criminal justice and immigration legal systems. We will study how the immigration court process works, and learn about forms of relief for those charged with being removable. We will end the semester with citizenship and naturalization. 5
Class DATE TOPIC READINGS From Essentials of Immigration Law READINGS: Statute OTHER READINGS (All on TWEN) 1 1/8/19 Intro and Membership: Who Belongs? N/A Quiz on Values, How Trump Radicalized ICE, White House Statement on Immigration 2 1/10/19 INA Structure and Administrative Overview 1-21 (top) Chae Chan Ping; Ellis Island and Angel Island Videos 3 1/15/19 Immigration and the Constitution 21-27 Chae Chan Ping; Fong Yue Ting; Hawaii v. Trump 4 1/17/19 Nonimmigrant Visas 119-139 INA 101(a)(15) Information Industries 5 1/22/19 Employment Based Immigration 141-146; 156-165 INA 203(b) NYSDOT 6 1/24/19 Family-Based Immigration: Spouses, children, derivatives, immediate relatives 147-156 (top) INA 203(a); INA 101(b) What is Chain Migration? 7 1/29/19 Famiy-Based Immigration: Marriage fraud, VAWA INA 216 Boansi, VAWA 8 1/31/19 Quotas, Numbers, and Backlogs INA 201 Visa Bulletin, Mae Ngai essay 9 2/5/19 Admission: Process and Concepts 29-51 INA 235(a) Practice Problems 10 2/7/19 Admission: Process and Concepts 109-119 INA 214(a)-(b); 101(a)(13) Fleuti 11 2/12/19 Intro to Admissibility and Deportability Grounds 51-55; 70 (middle)-80 INA 212 Additional readings TBD 12 2/14/19 Criminal Analysis 56-64 (middle) INA 237 Crimmigration Videos
Class DATE TOPIC READINGS From Essentials of Immigration Law READINGS: Statute OTHER READINGS (All on TWEN) 13 2/19/19 Criminal Analysis INA 237 Cases TBD 14 2/21/19 National Security & Detention 67-70(middle) INA 212(a)(3); INA 236; INA 235(c) Knauff; Mezei; Harisiades; Jennings 15 2/26/19 IN-CLASS MIDTERM 16 2/28/19 Judicial Review 171-194 INA 279 CRS Report 17 3/5/19 Immigration Court and Removal Procedure; Reflection Memo Due (See TWEN for Details) 18 3/7/19 In-Class Simulation (Part 1: Removability) INA 240 Simulation Materials; Master Calendar Hearings; Individual Hearings 19 3/12/19 Cancellation of Removal 81-85 INA 240A Monreal 20 3/14/19 Cancellation of Removal and Voluntary Departure INA 240B Additional readings TBD 3/19 & 3/21 BREAK 21 3/26/19 Asylum 91-106 INA 208 Well-Founded Fear; Elias-Zacarias 22 3/28/19 Asylum INA 235(b) INA 208 Acosta; East Bay v. Trump
Class DATE TOPIC READINGS From Essentials of Immigration Law READINGS: Statute OTHER READINGS (All on TWEN) 23 4/2/19 Catch-Up and Simulation Preparation Simulation Materials 24 4/4/19 In-Class Simulation (Part II) 25 4/9/19 TPS, DACA and other liminal statuses 106-108 Additional readings TBD 26 4/11/19 Enforcement & Constitutional Rights INA 274, 274A Yick wo v Hopkins; How Trump Radicalized ICE (Part II) 27 4/16/19 Naturalization and Citizenship 195-207 INA 301, 309 Additional readings TBD 28 4/18/19 Naturalization and Citizenship INA 311-316 Additional readings TBD