发明驱逐逮捕

IF 2.1 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Lindsay Nash
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在联邦驱逐制度开始实施之初,美国最高移民官员宣布,行政官员拥有授权驱逐逮捕的“特殊权力”。他向国民保证,这一巨大的权力——当时由内阁秘书(唯一有权授权逮捕的行政官员)掌控——是经过“非常谨慎和深思熟虑”的。一个世纪后,这种非凡的权力在法律上微不足道,仅由低级执法官员系统地行使。因此,成千上万的这些官员——移民系统的警察和狱卒——现在有权单独决定驱逐逮捕是否合理,从而决定是否每年让10多万人接受我们现代驱逐制度的延长拘留和简单程序。这种驱逐逮捕制度——在我们的执法系统中仍然是反常的——被这样一种观念所证明是合理的:当涉及到逮捕约束时,移民执法总是不同的,而现代驱逐逮捕制度的有效性已经通过其历史得到了证明。本文将调查并最终挑战这些理由。它侧重于联邦移民计划中行政逮捕权的出现,并探讨了曾经“非常”和有限的授权驱逐逮捕的权力如何在法律上变得微不足道和分散。它不仅提供了联邦驱逐逮捕权从成立到现代的发明和发展的第一个帐户,而且在关键方面与传统帐户不同并使其复杂化。具体来说,它揭示了一个早期的驱逐逮捕程序系统,即使在对移民怀有强烈敌意和公然种族主义移民法规的时代,该系统的目的是对执法人员的逮捕权进行更大的检查,并比现代移民计划进行更有力的独立审查。本文还描述了为什么这种情况最终发生了变化,为我们今天的处境提供了重要的见解。最后,本文对传统的叙述提出了质疑,即现代驱逐出境逮捕制度是由其过去证明的,并对依赖于它的近乎一致的判例法提出了质疑。这样一来,法院就有理由重新考虑这一计划的宪法有效性,并为从根本上改变驱逐逮捕制度的呼吁提供了历史支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Inventing Deportation Arrests
At the dawn of the federal deportation system, the nation’s top immigration official proclaimed the power to authorize deportation arrests “an extraordinary one” to vest in administrative officers. He reassured the nation that this immense power—then wielded by a cabinet secretary, the only executive officer empowered to authorize these arrests—was exercised with “great care and deliberation.” A century later, this extraordinary power is legally trivial and systemically exercised by low-level enforcement officers alone. Consequently, thousands of these officers—the police and jailors of the immigration system— now have the power to solely determine whether deportation arrests are justified and, therefore, whether to subject over a hundred thousand people annually to the extended detention and bare process of our modern deportation system. This deportation arrest regime—still anomalous in our law enforcement system— has been justified by the notion that immigration enforcement has always been different when it comes to arrest constraints and that the validity of the modern deportation arrest system is evidenced through its history. This Article investigates and ultimately challenges those justifications. It focuses on the advent of administrative arrest authority in the federal immigration scheme and explores how the once “extraordinary” and confined power to authorize deportation arrests became legally trivial and diffuse. It not only provides the first account of the invention and development of federal deportation arrest authority from its inception to the modern day, but also one that differs from and complicates the conventional account in critical ways. Specifically, it reveals an early system of deportation arrest procedures that, even at a time of virulent hostility toward immigrants and overtly racist immigration regulation, was designed to impose significantly greater checks on enforcement officers’ arrest authority and more robust independent review than does the modern immigration scheme. This Article also describes why that eventually changed, providing important insight on why we are where we are today. Ultimately, this Article contests the conventional narrative that the modern deportation arrest regime is justified by its past and casts doubt on the near-unanimous case law that has relied on it. In so doing, it gives courts a reason to reconsider the constitutional validity of this scheme and provides historical support for calls to fundamentally transform the deportation arrest system.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
3.70%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: The Michigan Law Review is a journal of legal scholarship. Eight issues are published annually. Seven of each volume"s eight issues ordinarily are composed of two major parts: Articles by legal scholars and practitioners, and Notes written by the student editors. One issue in each volume is devoted to book reviews. Occasionally, special issues are devoted to symposia or colloquia. First Impressions, the online companion to the Michigan Law Review, publishes op-ed length articles by academics, judges, and practitioners on current legal issues. This extension of the printed journal facilitates quick dissemination of the legal community’s initial impressions of important judicial decisions, legislative developments, and timely legal policy issues.
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