Search for: "Allison Tirres" Results 41 - 57 of 57
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15 Dec 2017, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
  (h/t @kangborderlaw)  Over at Jotwell: Citizens, Aliens, and the Architecture of Exclusion, Allison Brownell Tirres’s review of Kunal M. [read post]
28 May 2021, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
  Commentators are Laura Edwards (Princeton), Mark Graber (Maryland), Michael Les Bendict (Ohio State), Sanford Levinson (Texas), Gerard Magliocca (Indiana), William Novack (Michigan), Kunal Parker (Miami), and Allison Tirres (DePaul). [read post]
15 Oct 2014, 3:30 am by Allison Tirres
Allison Tirres There are three paths to citizenship in the United States: birth, naturalization, and descent. [read post]
23 Jun 2023, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
Schwartz, Jessica Bulman-Pozen, Edward Purcell, Alison LaCroix, and Sandy Levinson.From the Washington Post's "Made by History" section: Allison Brownell Tirres (DePaul University College of Law), "It doesn’t make sense to bar authorized immigrants from certain jobs"; Angus McLeod (University of Pennsylvania), "The Supreme Court stopped the latest assault on Native American sovereignty"; and more. [read post]
7 Feb 2014, 9:30 pm by Karen Tani
The El Paso Newspaper Tree is carrying a report of a recent address at the University of Texas-El Paso by Allison Brownell Tirres (DePaul Law). [read post]
29 Aug 2011, 7:23 am by Tomiko Brown-Nagin
Here are the presenters and the titles of their workshop papers:  Fall:October 10: Allison Tirres, DePaul Law SchoolTitle: “Contested Terrain: Citizenship in the Borderlands during Civil War and Reconstruction”November 14: Ed Larson, Pepperdine Law School            Title:   “The Constitutionality of Lame-Duck Lawmaking: The History, Intent, and Meaning of the Twentieth Amendment”November 28:… [read post]
28 Feb 2011, 4:30 am by Allison Tirres
Allison Tirres Modern immigration law is built upon a specific historical foundation: the efforts of lawmakers to exclude Chinese immigrants from the country in the late nineteenth century. [read post]
9 Jul 2012, 4:00 am by Allison Tirres
Allison Tirres Recently, thousands of people participated in the forty-seventh anniversary of the historic 1965 marches from Selma to Montgomery. [read post]
29 May 2013, 7:00 am by Dan Ernst
Allison Tirres examines how state limitations on immigrants’ property and liberty rights have fared under the Fourteenth Amendment, and demonstrates how states’ involvement in alien rights raises practical concerns about the relationship between federal and state power. [read post]
26 May 2021, 7:30 am by Guest Blogger
  Allison Brownell Tirres is Associate Dean of Academic Affairs & Strategic Initiatives and Associate Professor at DePaul University College of Law. [read post]
3 Apr 2013, 5:22 am by Alfred Brophy
Davis and James Campbell respectively), Women (Felice Batlan),  Families (David Tanenhaus), Immigrants (Allison Brownell Tirres), and Lawyers (Mark Steiner). [read post]
5 Jul 2011, 6:36 am by Mary L. Dudziak
  The session also included Benjamin Coates, Allison Brownell Tirres, and Robert McGreevey. [read post]
26 Apr 2013, 9:10 pm by Alfred Brophy
Davis and James Campbell respectively), Women (Felice Batlan),  Families (David Tanenhaus), Immigrants (Allison Brownell Tirres), and Lawyers (Mark Steiner). [read post]
23 Mar 2010, 4:49 am by Alfred Brophy
Konefsky, Simon Greenleaf, Boston Elites, and the Social Meaning and Construction of the Charles River Bridge Case 12 Christopher Tomlins, Toward a Materialist Jurisprudence 13 Allison Brownell Tirres, The View from the Border: Law and Community in the Nineteenth Century PART III TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICAN LAW TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS REVOLUTION 14 Felice Batlan, Notes from the Margins: Florence Kelley and the Making of Sociological Jurisprudence 15 Thomas A. [read post]
21 Jan 2011, 1:18 pm by Alfred Brophy
Konefsky, Simon Greenleaf, Boston Elites, and the Social Meaning and Construction of the Charles River Bridge Case 12 Christopher Tomlins, Toward a Materialist Jurisprudence 13 Allison Brownell Tirres, The View from the Border: Law and Community in the Nineteenth Century PART III TWENTIETH-CENTURY AMERICAN LAW TO THE CIVIL RIGHTS REVOLUTION 14 Felice Batlan, Notes from the Margins: Florence Kelley and the Making of Sociological… [read post]
1 Jul 2021, 6:30 am by Guest Blogger
For the Symposium on Kate Masur, Until Justice Be Done: America's First Civil Rights Movement, From the Revolution to Reconstruction (W. [read post]