Richard E. Gutierrez Volume 75, Issue 6, 1535-1580
Black Equal Citizenship and Residential Segregation in the Supreme Court’s Race Jurisprudence
Gabriel J. Chin Volume 75, Issue 6, 1581-1600
DACA’s Stratified Tracks for Economic Mobility and Lessons for Addressing Immigrants’ Long-Term Inequality
Els de Graauw & Shannon Gleeson Volume 75, Issue 6, 1601-1624 Presented at the We the People: Citizenship, Race, and Equality Symposium at UC Law San Francisco on February 2, 2024. Since 2012, the politically tenuous Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA)...
The Racial Triangulation of Asian American Achievement
Vinay Harpalani Volume 75, Issue 6, 1625-1644 This Essay employs Professor Claire Jean Kim’s racial triangulation framework to examine how Asian Americans are racialized via academic achievement. It argues that there are two components to the racial triangulation of...
The KKK, Immigration Law and Policy, and Donald Trump
Kevin R. Johnson Volume 75, Issue 6, 1645-1666 Many Americans know the Ku Klux Klan (KKK) for its horrific acts of violence directed at African Americans. Although generally overshadowed by that violence, the KKK’s vilification of other groups, including immigrants...
The Importance of Counting All Immigrants for Apportionment and Redistricting
Tye Rush, Samuel Hall and Matt A. Barreto Volume 75, Issue 6, 1667-1692 How are non-citizens counted and accounted for in representation? Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment requires that all whole persons residing in a state are to be counted for apportionment and...
Political Representation and Economic Rights in the Shadows of Citizenship
Allison Brownell Tirres Volume 75, Issue 6, 1693-1704 In recent years, the remarkable movement for the political rights of undocumented youth—the so-called “DREAMers”—has catalyzed a critical conversation about the economic rights of all noncitizens. A growing number...
Weep the People
Leti Volpp Volume 75, Issue 6, 1705-1728
Epilogue: UC Law Journal – RICE Symposium
Ming H. Chen Volume 75, Issue 6, 1729-1740
From UC Hastings to UC Law SF: An Examination of the Renaming Process and Analysis of Institutional Identity
Oliver Cheng Volume 75, Issue 6, 1741-1794 The University of California, Hastings College of the Law, changed its name to the University of California College of the Law, San Francisco, after it found that its namesake, Serranus Hastings, contributed significantly to...