Richard A. Boswell

Professor of Law UC Hastings College of the Law

  • San Francisco CA

Contacts: boswellr@uchastings.edu / 415-565-4633 / Office 350-200

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UC Hastings College of the Law

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Biography

Professor Boswell joined the full-time faculty at UC Hastings after teaching as a visiting professor in 1990. He received his B.A. in Urban Economics from Loyola-Marymount University in Los Angeles and his J.D. from the George Washington University National Law Center where he was a member of the Journal of International Law & Economics. He was in private practice and later joined the faculty of the George Washington University National Law Center where he founded the law school’s immigration clinic and directed their Trial Practice Program. Working his way west, he joined the law faculty at the Notre Dame in 1986.

Professor Boswell has written extensively in the field of immigration law and is the author of 10 books and more than 15 articles. His books include Immigration Law & Procedure: Cases and Materials (4th ed. 2010), Refugee Law & Policy: a Comparative and International Approach (4th Ed. 2011) (coauthored with Karen Musalo and Jennifer Moore) and Essentials of Immigration Law (3rd ed. 2012). He has testified on numerous occasions before congressional committees and is a frequent lecturer on immigration law both nationally and internationally. Most recently he has served as Special Master for the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of California in Catholic Social Services, et al. v. Napolitano, a class action involving the 1986 immigration amnesty.

As one of the founders of the Clinical Education Association, he served as its President in 1994. He served as coeditor-in-chief of the Clinical Law Review (1997-2002) and remains as an ex-officio member of its Board of Editors. The Clinical Law Review is a peer reviewed law journal of the Clinical Legal Education Association (CLEA), the New York University Law School and the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). In addition to his work in clinical legal education, Professor Boswell has worked on rule of law/justice projects in Central Asia, Colombia, Guatemala, Palestine, Venezuela and most recently in Haiti. His current scholarly work involves a comparative study of the immigration laws of more than seven countries covering a broad range of legal systems.

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Areas of Expertise

Statutory Interpretation
Immigration Law
Immigrants' Rights Clinic
Refugee Law & Policy

Education

The George Washington University Law School

J.D.

Law

1979

Loyola Marymount University

B.A.

Urban Economics

1975

Affiliations

  • Clinical Education Association : Founder
  • Clinical Law Review (Journal) : Ex-Officio Member, Board of Editors

Languages

  • English
  • Spanish

Media Appearances

Law students, lawyers help UC Santa Cruz students avoid deportation

San Jose Mercury News  online

2014-10-19

Deferred action is not a pathway to citizenship, said Boswell. "It's a temporary reprieve," he said. "It gives people the opportunity to come out of the shadows -- attend school, get a California drivers license." For most of these students, their only hope for citizenship is comprehensive immigration reform, which may be on the horizon, Boswell said. Congress came close last year when the Senate passed a bill that would have allowed green cards for immigrants meeting certain criteria, but lacked House support, he said...

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Petition to Deport Bieber: Is Justin Bieber getting special treatment

FOX  online

2014-04-21

As with all deportations, the president has the “inherent power to choose which cases to act on,” said Richard A. Boswell, immigration law professor at the University of California’s Hastings College of the Law. It’s called “prosecutorial discretion.” But fortunately for Bieber — and possibly the President who would upset millions of teen fans — is that his DUI is not a deportable offense. His vandalism charge probably isn’t either. His assault charge might be, experts say...

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Should Obama use the power of his pen to turn the tide on immigration reform?

CNN  online

2014-04-15

Using prosecutorial discretion, the executive branch has the "inherent power to choose which cases to act on," Richard A. Boswell, an immigration law professor at the University of California's Hastings College of the Law, told CNN...

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Selected Articles

Crafting an Amnesty with Traditional Tools: Registration and Cancellation

Harvard Journal of Legislation

2010-01-01

Immigration amnesty while widely believed to be an anomaly has strong historical precedent, and is found in various provisions of the current immigration law. Large numbers of undocumented persons are currently residing in the United States and amnesty is one way of bringing these people out from under the shadows. This article argues that in order for an amnesty to be effective that it must be both uncomplicated and broad. The article argues further that a careful updating of registry and cancellation of removal, two traditional tools found in U.S. immigration laws offer the best possibility for a successful amnesty program.

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Racism and US Immigration Law: Prospects for Reform after 9/11

Immigration and Nationality Law Review

2003-01-01

Racism, racial discrimination and xenophobia are not naturally instinctive reactions of the human beings but rather a social, cultural and political phenomenon born directly of wars, military conquests, slavery and the individual or collective exploitation of the weakest by the most powerful all along the history of human societies.

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Throwing Away the Key: Limits on the Plenary Power

Michigan Journal of International Law

1997-07-01

In the spring of 1980, at the same time that the United States Congress enacted the Refugee Act of 1980, the Carter Administration began admitting a large number of refugees from Cuba under its parole authority. This occurred despite the fact that Congress, by enacting the Refugee Act, expected to both change the way that refugees were admitted into the country and limit the role of politics in their admission. The arrival and subsequent treatment of these Cuban refugees in America highlight the consequences of allowing politics to dominate what essentially must be a humanitarian act.

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