LEGAL 166 - Immigration Law and the Rights of Non-Citizens5 Credits From a global perspective, this course will survey the contemporary and historical immigration issues with respect to race, gender, religion and human rights. The course will focus on the impact of substantive and procedural laws including (1) Local, regional, global and socioeconomic integration and interdependence as dictated by immigration law; (2) Societal/cultural group contributions to legal theory or systems; (3)Institutional oppression and dominant group privilege as dictated by immigration law and policy; (4) Prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination and its influence and impact on immigration law; (5) The social construction of law; (6) Skills for confronting biased treatment and advocating for justice; and (7) Dynamics of intercultural or inter-societal conflict and conflict resolution.
Course Note Cross-listed with DGS 166 Fees
Quarters Typically Offered Summer Day Spring Day
Designed to Serve Students interested in Immigration and Legal Issues; satisfies DGS requirement; Legal Studies Department elective Active Date 20240322T08:19:56
Grading Basis Decimal Grade Class Limit 38 Shared Learning Environment Yes Contact Hours: Lecture 55 Total Contact Hours 55 Degree Distributions: AA ProfTech Course Yes Restricted Elective Yes Course Outline - An overview of the legal system
- A history of immigration and immigration law
- Temporary statuses
- Avenues to permanent residence
- Citizenship
- Asylum/Refugee status
- The Diversity Visa
- Matters related to undocumented aliens and workers
- Matters related to undocumented children
- The impact of legal and illegal immigration
- Comparative immigration law
Student Learning Outcomes Correctly apply substantive federal immigration law to hypothetical fact patterns.
Effectively analyze the historical impacts of dominant cultural perspectives on race, gender, culture and human rights on the development of immigration law.
Analyze and apply substantive immigration law to selected issues of intercultural and inter-societal conflict and conflict resolution
Correctly articulate the power and limits of immigration law to impacts issues of prejudice, stereotyping and discrimination.
Recognize and analyze essential ways that legal institutions enforce biased and inequitable treatment of non-citizens and non-residents at a community level.
Demonstrate effectivel legal advocacy skill on behalf disenfranchised non-citizens/non-residents
Articulate essential global perspectives with regard to immigration and issues of race, gender, culture and human rights.
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