Daniel Costa, Josh Bivens, Ben Zipperer, and Monique Morrissey • October 4, 2024 "Immigration has been a source of strength for the U.S. economy and has great potential to boost it even more...
Austin Kocher reviews Private Violence: Latin American Women and the Struggle for Asylum
Yale history professor Timothy Snyder has a warning for us.
eCornell "Immigration will be a key issue in 2025. Everyone agrees that we have a broken immigration system, but people disagree on the solutions. Congress is paralyzed. Presidents try executive...
Prof. Kevin Shih, Sept. 17, 2024 "This year marks the 30th anniversary of the Trade NAFTA (TN) classification program, which was established in 1994 under the North American Free Trade Agreement...
Lyle Moran, ABA Journal, Nov. 17, 2021
"Michele Pistone, a professor at the Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law, says there are not enough immigration lawyers and attorneys who take on pro bono cases to meet the demand of immigrants seeking legal assistance. This justice gap is a primary reason that Pistone decided to create a program at her university to train paraprofessionals to become accredited by the U.S. Department of Justice to handle legal work in the immigration realm. “Accredited representatives” are permitted to represent clients in immigration courts and in appeals before the DOJ’s Board of Immigration Appeals, as well as represent immigrants before the U.S. Department of Homeland Security’s U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. The Villanova Interdisciplinary Immigration Studies Training for Advocates program, known as VIISTA, launched in August 2020, and more than 200 students have completed at least one of the online program’s three content modules. Pistone says it’s been very exciting to “start training up people for this authorization in a market where there is so much need and so few resources for immigrants who need representation.” In this new episode of the Legal Rebels Podcast, Pistone discusses the creation and components of the VIISTA program, the diverse backgrounds of students it has attracted so far, and the types of work that the program’s initial graduates are undertaking."