Law and Politics of Immigration: Migrants and Inevitable Evolution of Collective and Individual Rights

(Formerly numbered Labor and Workplace Studies 168.) Lecture, three hours. With immigration and rights of migrants at center of current political and legal debates throughout world, study offers critical introduction to inevitable evolution of law and policy resulting from--and in reaction to--movement of immigrants. Endows students with wide array of analytical tools with which to engage current political debates about immigration. Using historical and modern texts, while incorporating elements of art, popular culture, and storytelling, study encourages discussion, debate, and analysis about immigrants' role in development of rights and modern political debates about immigration. Exploration of themes of inclusion, exclusion, integration, and multiculturalism. Students describe shortcomings of status-quo policies while also imaging and prescribing arguments about where law can and should go. P/NP or letter grading.

Review Summary

Clarity
N/A
Organization
N/A
Time
N/A
Overall
N/A

Enrollment Progress

Jul 13, 4 PM PDT
LEC 1: 43/43 seats taken (Full)
First passPriority passSecond pass2 days5 days8 days11 days14 days17 days20 days23 days26 days0204060

Course

Instructor
Chris Newman
Previously taught
24F 23F 22F 21F
Formerly offered as
LBR&WS 168

Previous Grades

Grade distributions not available.