Contributing Editors

  • Anne Bardolph
    Acquisitions Librarian
    email

    Pat Bingham-Harper
    Cataloging Librarian
    email

    Margaret Clark
    Reference Librarian
    email

    Marin Dell
    Reference Librarian
    email

    Elizabeth Farrell
    Reference Librarian
    email

    Robin Gault
    Associate Director
    email

    Faye Jones
    Professor and Director of Law Library
    email

    Jon Lutz
    Electronic Services Librarian
    email

    Mary McCormick
    Assistant Director for Public Services
    email

    Trisha Simonds
    Reference Libriarian
    email

May 2008

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Tracking Immigration Enforcement

With Congress making new efforts to pass comprehensive immigration reform, researchers have raised questions about the enforcement of the existing law.  The TRAC (Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse) Immigration Project has analyzed records and produced reports on many aspects of enforcement.  Most recently TRAC issued a report which compared the rhetoric of the Department of Homeland Security with the reality of charges filed by DHS in the immigration courts.

Posted by Robin Gault

Remainders

In describing an intuitive process native to novel writers, the author of Invisible Writer (Johnson, 1999, p.9) quotes American master of psychological realism, Joyce Carol Oates.

Somehow, without knowing what I did, without knowing, in fact, that I was doing anything extraordinary at all, I had written my mother’s story by way of a work of prose fiction I had invented.

The author of Invisible Writer says on the same page:

What Joyce did not mention is that a similar instance of her novelistic ‘intuition’ had occurred almost twenty years earlier. In A Garden of Earthly Delights (1967), she had written a scene that also bears a striking resemblance to the circumstances of her grandfather’s murder.

Novelistic intuition. I’m curious to know what phrase will be coined to cover the writerly source of this short story, especially because of this. (Mrs. Oates's apology.)

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A Research Fellow at St. Anthony's College, Oxford University and the Lokahi Foundation in London and author of a book to be published by Oxford University Press says he is “barred [...] from entering the United States to pursue an academic career.” (link)

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Mr. Salman Rushdie has sold his literary papers to Emory University and according to The Guardian newspaper, his "decision to sell his literary papers to an American university should be applauded for highlighting a lamentable aspect of UK government policy." (link)

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If you google, oops… [Note to self: To be on the safe side of the legal question, thall shalt not use Google as a verb (link)]. If you look for a Mr. Smiley III, you will learn that he is a thorn in the stacks of many libraries. (link)

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Jeffrey Toobin interviews the Honorable Stephen G. Breyer. (video)

Posted by Toni Urquhart

The Asylum Primer

Aila_1895_472961The AILA Asylum Primer by Regina Germain, a veteran asylum attorney and former Senior Legal Counselor of the Washington Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, is one of the Law Library's latest print acquisitions. "AILA's Asylum Primer provides practical, interpretive guidance of the entire asylum process. Intended for everyone from attorneys to government officials, from law professors to law students, from nonprofit organizations to asylum seekers themselves, AILA's Asylum Primer will help you understand and resolve critical asylum issues and provide answers to help you through the asylum process--from the first meeting until you close the case."  It is available in the Law Library on the third floor.

Excerpt taken from: http://www.ailapubs.org/ailasprim.html

Posted by Marin Dell

Real ID Act

MIT REAL ID FORUM

Your digital identity and physical identity may be about to merge under a new federal law that requires a standard federally controlled identity card. You are invited to participate in the first Real ID Forum, convened by the MIT Media Lab and MIT E-Commerce Architecture Program. The Real ID Act of 2005, as enacted by Congress and signed by the President, sets up a new federally controlled driver license that can be read by computers according to common national standards. This raises many public policy, technical and business problems and prospects. The act is binding starting in less than three years.

The first forum is on online discussion, facilitated by experts in the relevant fields, and taking place from Monday, September 19th at 3pm Eastern Time through Friday, September 23rd. Is the Real ID going to be a National Identity for the USA? Does it represent the ultimate convergence of physical identity cards and your digital log in? Are the privacy, civil liberties and administrative issues addressed adequately? How should the various competing interests surrounding implementation of the Real ID Act be balanced? These are among the questions that will be addressed in the online Forum. There will also be a face to face meeting, held at the MIT Media Lab in November, 2005. To find out more information and to register for this free program, please see http://ecitizen.mit.edu/realid.html

Posted by Faye Jones