1. How Immigration Detention Became Exceptional.
- Author
-
Arnold, Paulina D.
- Subjects
Detention of persons -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Demographic aspects -- History ,Exceptionalism (Political philosophy) -- Laws, regulations and rules -- Ethical aspects -- Demographic aspects ,Emigration and immigration law -- Interpretation and construction -- History ,Demore v. Hyung Joon Kim (538 U.S. 510 (2003)) ,Reno v. Flores (507 U.S. 292 (1993)) ,Zadvydas v. Davis (533 U.S. 678 (2001)) ,Government regulation ,Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 ,United States Code (8 U.S.C. 1226(c)) ,Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act of 1996 - Abstract
Table of Contents Introduction I. Civil Confinement in the Nineteenth Century A. Tools of Pre-Carceral Control: The Eighteenth Century B. Early Civil Confinement 1. Workhouses and almshouses 2. Houses of [...], Over the last five years, the United States has held around 37,000 people in immigration detention every day. Over 70% are held without any chance of bond. For those who manage to obtain a bond hearing, they bear the burden of proving that they are neither dangerous nor a flight risk. This scheme would be plainly illegal under the constitutional law governing other forms of civil confinement. But current precedent suggests that immigration detention is and always has been exceptional. This Article argues that immigration detention exceptionalism is a modern doctrine, not one compelled by history. Immigration detention, at its inception, was part of a system of mass civil confinement of the poor--in workhouses, juvenile facilities, and mental asylums--that lacked meaningful constitutional limits. This civil confinement system also functioned as a form of state immigration control, both targeting immigrants and confining them at rates wildly disproportionate to citizens. Immigration detention was not exceptional for its lack of constitutional safeguards, which was an unremarkable feature of all civil confinement systems at the time. Immigration detention's initial exemption from the constitutional law that has come to govern other forms of civil confinement was largely a historical accident. Immigration detention was the first domino to fall in a backlash against the mass civil confinement of the mid-century. When the Court began constitutionally regulating other forms of civil confinement, the thirty-year hiatus on immigration detention had already begun. As a result, when the Court in the 1970s placed constitutional limits on all other forms of civil confinement, it simply had no cause to address immigration detention. Only recently has the modern Court--citing anachronistic nineteenth-century precedent--placed immigration detention on a different constitutional footing than its civil-confinement counterparts. This Article shows how the detention of immigrants, far from being exceptional, was at its inception a central part of civil confinement. This history reframes immigration detention exceptionalism as a modern innovation, undercutting the Court's defense of the current regime and placing the arguments for transforming immigration detention on even firmer footing.
- Published
- 2023