Sessions Information

  • May 2, 2018
    9:00 am - 10:30 am
    Session Type: AALS Programs
    Session Capacity: N/A
    Location: N/A
    Room: Clark 9
    Floor: Seventh Floor

    Housing the Colonized:  Reurbanization and the Promise of Spacial Equity

    Norrinda Hayat, University of the District of Columbia, David A. Clarke School of Law

    Socio-economic status is being framed by some as the next frontier in the fight for fair housing. The influx of white elites in cities nationwide, the attendant displacement of historical populations, the provision of housing vouchers to these displaced persons and the well-documented evidence of impediments to utilizing housing vouchers has caused some scholars to renew calls to have “source of income” protection added to the federal Fair Housing Act. Doing so, however, will not likely increase mobility, curtail residential segregation or improve the quality of housing masses of blacks live in. Even in cities where local law already prohibits discrimination based on source of income, extreme patterns of racial segregation persist with the vast majority of blacks isolated in poor housing. Substituting a race equity strategy with an economic one at the federal level is likely to be equally ineffective. This is because, as I argue in an earlier piece, discrimination against voucher holders is a proxy for race discrimination. Instead of focusing on the illusion of mobility, this article articulates a spatial equity theory that calls for state and local governments to direct significant resources to majority-minority neighborhoods and house residents fairly and affordably in place.

     

    Destigmatizing Disability Under U.S. Immigration Law: A Proposal for a Construction of Disablement Based on Dignity as Opposed to Dependency

    Medha D. Makhlouf, The Pennsylvania State University—Dickinson Law

     

    In U.S. immigration law, disability has served as the basis to exclude noncitizens from entry and eventual citizenship. Although the law has evolved to accommodate individuals with disabilities in some ways, significant legal barriers still exist. This article examines the strengths and limitations of adopting a destigmatizing account of disablement in the immigration law. Such an account would characterize disablement as normatively neutral rather than linking it to inescapable disadvantage. Among the limitations of adopting a destigmatizing account is the potential adverse effect of bolstering arguments to further restrict immigrants’ eligibility for publicly funded health care and other health-promoting public benefits. This would be devastating to many immigrants with disabilities who depend on the social safety net due to expensive health care needs and social constructs that limit their participation in the labor market. The final section of the article proposes a construction of disablement that (1) characterizes immigrants with disabilities as valuable and contributing members of society; and (2) emphasizes collective responsibility for carrying the costs of disability in order to equalize the well-being of immigrants and citizens with disabilities, as well as to move toward functional equality for immigrants with and without disabilities
Session Speakers
University of the District of Columbia, David A. Clarke School of Law
Intensive Paper Feedback Presenter

Penn State Dickinson Law
Intensive Paper Feedback Presenter

Session Fees

Fees information is not available at this time.