Immigration Enforcement at the Worksite

120px-us_immigration_and_customs_enforcement_arrestOur recent graduate Ben Crouse has a fascinating new paper on SSRN entitled “Worksite Raids and Immigration Norms: A ‘Sticky’ Problem.”  Drawing on Dan Kahan’s theory of social norms, Ben critiques the government’s use of high-profile worksite raids as a tactic to deter employers from hiring illegal immigrants.  Here is a taste:

The government’s high-profile raids may encourage an anti-enforcement backlash, especially when accompanied by criminal prosecutions of employers and employees alike.  In fact, high-profile raids seem perfectly tailored to amplify anti-enforcement norms.  By coupling employer enforcement measures with large-scale criminal prosecutions and removal of immigrants, the measures arouse the anxieties of the Hispanic population.  By bankrupting large employers, the measures also jeopardize the economic future of the communities that depend on them.

As an alternative to an enforcement strategy built around a small number of high-impact raids, Ben proposes reforms that would result in a larger number of enforcement actions against employers, but with less draconian results for both employers and employees.  He would make it easier for the government to sanction employers who hire illegal immigrants, but also reduce the magnitude of the sanctions in many cases, which should diminish anti-enforcement backlash.

Ben’s paper won the Silver Quill Award earlier this year for being one of the top two students comments published in volume 92 of the Marquette Law Review.

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Criminal Appeals Conference Next Week

It won’t be long before our distinguished speakers begin arriving in Milwaukee for the Criminal Appeals Conference on Monday and Tuesday.  You can preview the Conference handout (including abstracts of the papers to be presented and biographies of the speakers) here.  The main venue for the Conference is now full, but it is still possible to register here for overflow seating with a video feed.  An audio recording will be also be available for download after the Conference.

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Social Framework Evidence in Employment Discrimination Cases

I’ve just read a fascinating new article by Paul Secunda and Melissa Hart on the use of expert social science testimony in employment discrimination cases.  They report on the conflict, both in the courtroom and in the academy, over the use of so-called “social framework” evidence, which speaks to the tendency of certain workplace policies and practices to promote (or reduce) the impact of stereotyping and bias.  The debate echoes debates elsewhere in the law over the use of science that cannot definitively establish causation, but can only deal in likelihoods or relative increases in risk.  I am reminded of a case I use in teaching the insanity defense, United States v. Lyons, 731 F.2d 243 (5th Cir. 1984), in which the Fifth Circuit bemoans the inability of psychologists to state with certainty whether a crime resulted from a defendant’s inability to control himself.

Entitled “A Matter of Context: Social Framework Evidence in Employment Discrimination Class Actions,” the full Secunda-Hart article is available here on SSRN.  You can read the abstract after the break. 

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