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BIA review federal jurisdiction ruling [US SC] News
BIA review federal jurisdiction ruling [US SC]
January 20, 2010 01:20:00 pm

Kucana v. Holder, US Supreme Court, January 20, 2010 [giving federal courts jurisdiction to review rulings on motions to reopen decisions by the Board of Immigration Appeals].

Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here. Latest commentary available here. JURIST has more on Board of Immigration Appeals.

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Latest DISPATCHES
US lawmakers introduce resolution to recognize Israel’s assault on Gaza as genocide

US lawmakers introduce resolution to recognize Israel’s assault on Gaza as genocide

Canada dispatch: Human Rights Tribunal limits government delay tactics in national security cases

Canada dispatch: Human Rights Tribunal limits government delay tactics in national security cases

Latest COMMENTARY
The US Withdrawal from the Universal Periodic Review Undermines Global Human Rights Accountability

The US Withdrawal from the Universal Periodic Review Undermines Global Human Rights Accountability

by Leena Alsayab | American University Washington College of Law
Monarchy v. Media: How Royal Lawsuits Are Reshaping Press Relations

Monarchy v. Media: How Royal Lawsuits Are Reshaping Press Relations

by Elizabeth Vulaj
Latest FEATURES
Explainer: Does Ghana’s Deportation Deal With the US Breach Constitutional Procedure?

Explainer: Does Ghana’s Deportation Deal With the US Breach Constitutional Procedure?

One Year On: Sri Lanka’s Leftist NPP Government Falls Short of Expectations

One Year On: Sri Lanka’s Leftist NPP Government Falls Short of Expectations

THIS DAY @ LAW

Fyodor Dostoevsky sentenced to death

Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky was sentenced to death on November 16, 1849 over his involvement in the progressive Petrashevsky Circle of intellectuals. Dostoevsky and his codefendants were scheduled to be executed on December 22 of that year, but their execution was stayed by Tsar Nicholas I after the execution ritual had been carried out. Dostoevsky was sent to Siberia instead to serve a four-year sentence. Learn more about the mock execution of Dostoevsky.

Canada executed Metis leader for treason

On November 16, 1885, the Canadian government executed Metis leader Louis Riel for high treason in the wake of the "Northwest Rebellion" that had pitted the Metis (descendants of French traders and native tribes) in what is now Saskatchewan against Canadian troops. Although Riel has lately been rehabilitated as an Indigenous francophone patriot of the Canadian West, his trial and execution remain sore points between English and French Canada.

US President Nixon signs Trans-Alaska Pipeline Act

On November 16, 1973, US President Richard Nixon signed the Trans-Alaska Pipeline Act into law. In addition to creating an oil pipeline across the state, the Act also quashed all environmental-legal challenges regarding its construction.

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