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International Law and Detention of US Asylum Seekers: Contrasting Matter of D-J- with the United Nations Refugee Convention
Authors:Naumik   Alicia Triche
Affiliation:* Alicia Triche Naumik is a former CLINIC detention attorney who is currently composing a doctoral thesis on international refugee law and ‘national security’ at Oxford University. She is also a part-time appellate attorney at Nesom Law Office in Oakdale, Louisiana, where she specializes in removal defense. This article is based loosely on a Master of Studies degree awarded by the Oxford Law Faculty in Oct. 2003. The author wishes to express profound gratitude to all who have helped make this submission possible, most especially (in chronological order) Andrew Shacknove; the US-UK Fulbright Commission; Andrew Painter, Elizabeth Dallam and Jane Kochman of UNHCR; Guy Goodwin-Gill; Anna Nagrath and Siarhei Naumik. The author also wishes to thank Professors Goodwin-Gill and Mark Von Sternberg and the Oxford Public International Law seminar group for their commentary on earlier versions of this article. Citation is current as of 30 Nov. 2007
Abstract:US refugee law reflects an ever-increasing conception that theapplication of international standards would constitute an unacceptablerisk to national security. CSR Article 31(2)’s requirementthat refugees ‘shall not’ be detained unless ‘necessary’appears among the chief casualties of such suspicions. US jurisprudenceremains strikingly devoid of reference to Article 31, and 2003’sMatter of D-J- is a prime example. D-J- was an administrativedecision in which the US Attorney General held that nationalsecurity required all US asylum seekers who successfully arrivevia boat must be subject to mandatory detention throughout thecourse of removal proceedings. Despite US accession to the Protocol,Article 31(2) was not mentioned. This article explores what might have happened to D-J- if theRefugee Convention had indeed been applied to his case. Utilizingthe international methodology for treaty interpretation, itapplies Article 31(2) to various aspects of the Attorney General'sdecision. Part 2 argues that under the Supreme Court's CharmingBetsy rule, statutory discretion to detain must be interpretedconsistently with US international obligations. Part 3 concludesthat Article 31(2) of the Refugee Convention grants asylum seekersa right to release whenever their detention is not ‘necessary’.Part 4 proposes a three-part ‘pyramid’ approachto explain the elemental phases of the decision to detain anasylum seeker and examines necessity at each stage. Finally,Part 5 discusses Article 31(2)’s implications regardingevidence and proportion. The premise throughout is that, hadit been applied, the Refugee Convention could have protectedthe interests of both D-J- and ‘national security’.
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