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Posts tagged legal status
Loyalty Disarmament and the Undocumented

By Pratheepan Gulasekaram

Since the Supreme Court’s District of Columbia v. Heller decision in 2008, lower federal courts have wrestled with Second Amendment claims raised by categories of people excluded from gun possession. Among those cases, several have been brought by noncitizens challenging their prosecutions under 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(5), the federal criminal ban on possession by unlawfully present noncitizens. In the post-Heller § 922(g)(5) cases, judges have opined on whether unlawfully present noncitizens were among “the people” who had the right to bear arms and whether the government regulation met the appropriate level of constitutional scrutiny. More recently, however, the Supreme Court abandoned the tiers of scrutiny approach. In New York State Rifle & Pistol Association v. Bruen in 2022, the Court prescribed a novel historyfocused inquiry in its stead. Since then, the federal government and several lower federal courts have sought to justify present-day gun restrictions by searching for historical antecedents created to address analogous public policy concerns in analogous ways. In conducting that historical inquiry for § 922(g)(5), several courts have conjured Revolutionary War–era statutes that disarmed Loyalists to the British Crown. This Piece explains why such an analogy is a poor fit, arguing that the respective statutes serve incommensurate purposes and operate in materially different ways. It concludes with the suggestion that continued reliance on Bruen’s methodology (and attendant analogies to Loyalist disarmament) portends diminished and precarious constitutional protections for noncitizens with regard to their self-protection and, more broadly, other fundamental constitutional guarantees.

125 Colum. L. Rev. F. 29 (2025), 21p.

On the Radar: System Embeddedness and Latin American Immigrants' Perceived Risk of Deportation

By Asad L. Asad

Drawing on in-depth interviews with 50 Latin American immigrants in Dallas, Texas, this article uncovers systematic distinctions in how immigrants holding different legal statuses perceive the threat of deportation. Undocumented immigrants recognize the precarity of their legal status, but they sometimes feel that their existence off the radar of the US immigration regime promotes their long-term presence in the country. Meanwhile, documented immigrants perceive stability in their legal status, but they sometimes view their existence on the radar of the US immigration regime as disadvantageous to their long-term presence in the country. The article offers the concept of system embeddedness—individuals' perceived legibility to institutions that maintain formal records—as a mechanism through which perceived visibility to the US immigration regime entails feelings of risk, and perceived invisibility feelings of safety. In this way, the punitive character of the US immigration regime can overwhelm its integrative functions, chilling immigrants out of opportunities for material and social well-being through legalization and legal status. More broadly, system embeddedness illuminates how perceived visibility to a record-keeping body that combines punitive and integrative goals represents a mechanism of legal stratification for subordinated populations—even absent prior punitive experiences with other social control institutions that might otherwise be thought to trigger their system avoidance.

Law & Society Review, Volume 54, Number 1 (2020): 133–167