Contesting Immigration Policy in Court: Legal Activism and Its Radiating Effects in the United States and France
Leila Kawar - Cambridge University Press, 2015
What difference does law make in immigration policymaking? Since the
1970s, networks of progressive attorneys in both the US and France have
attempted to use litigation to assert rights for non-citizens. Yet
judicial engagement - while numerically voluminous - remains doctrinally
curtailed. This study offers new insights into the constitutive role of
law in immigration policymaking by focusing on the legal frames,
narratives, and performances forged through action in court. Challenging
the conventional wisdom that 'cause litigation' has little long-term
impact on policymaking unless it produces broad rights-protective
principles, this book shows that legal contestation can have important
radiating effects on policy by reshaping how political actors approach
immigration issues. Based on extensive fieldwork in the United States
and France, this book explores the paths by which litigation has
effected policy change in two paradigmatically different national
contexts.