Juliet Stumpf, Professor of Law at Lewis & Clark Law School, explores the
intersection of immigration law with criminal law and other substantive areas including
constitutional law, civil rights, and employment law. Her research is interdisciplinary,
examining the insights that sociology, psychology, criminology, and political science
bring to the study of immigration law. Her recent publications include Doing Time:
Crimmigration Law and the Perils of Haste, 58 UCLA L. Rev. 1705 (2011); Fitting
Punishment, 66 Wash. & Lee L. Rev. 1683 (2009); States of Confusion: the Rise of
State and Local Power over Immigration, 86 N.C. L. Rev. 1557 (2008); and The
Crimmigration Crisis: Immigrants, Crime, and Sovereign Power, 56 Am. U. L. Rev. 367
(2006). 

Before joining the Lewis & Clark Law School faculty in 2005, Professor Stumpf was on
the Lawyering Program faculty at the NYU School of Law. She clerked for the Honorable
Richard A. Paez on the Ninth Circuit, and served as a Senior Trial Attorney in the Civil
Rights Division of the Justice Department. She practiced with the law firm of Morrison
and Foerster in Palo Alto, California and Washington, D.C. 

Articles

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Individualism Submerged: Climate Change and the Perils of an Engineered Environment (with Daniel J. Chepaitis and Andrea Panagakis), UCLA Journal of Environmental Law & Policy (2010)

Current approaches to addressing the negative impacts of climate change rely on collective capabilities. Welfare...

 

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Fitting Punishment, ExpressO (2009)

Proportionality is conspicuously absent from the legal framework for immigration sanctions. Immigration law relies on...

 

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The Crimmigration Crisis: Immigrants, Crime, & Sovereign Power, ExpressO (2006)

This article provides a fresh theoretical perspective on the most important development in immigration law...