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Alienage Jurisdiction of US-Federal Courts (Paperback)
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Alienage Jurisdiction of US-Federal Courts (Paperback)
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Seminar paper from the year 2004 in the subject Law - Comparative
Legal Systems, Comparative Law, grade: B+; 15 Punkte, Suffolk
University Law School (International Law), course: International
Business Transactions, 32 entries in the bibliography, language:
English, comment: The founders of the United States recognized the
desirability of providing aliens access to the federal courts and
they expressly granted aliens the right to have their cases heard
in the fed-eral courts when they drafted the Constitution. As the
Constitution in Art III, 2 put it: "The judicial power shall extend
. . . to Controversies . . . between a State, or the Citizens
thereof, and foreign States, Citizens or Subjects.", abstract: The
founders of the United States recognized the desirability of
providing aliens access to the federal courts and they expressly
granted aliens the right to have their cases heard in the federal
courts when they drafted the Constitution. As the Constitution in
Art III, 2 put it: "The judicial power shall extend . . . to
Controversies . . . between a State, or the Cit izens thereof, and
foreign States, Citizens or Subjects." In explaining why federal
subject matter jurisdiction should extend to cases involving
aliens, Alexander Hamilton reasoned "an unjust sentence against a
foreigner ... would ... if unredressed, be an aggression upon his
sovereign, as well as one which violated the stipulations in a
treaty or the general laws of nations." At the same time, disputes
involving aliens were thought likely to involve legal and other
issues of national importance, which federal courts were deemed
best able to decide." Although there are few records of the
Constitutional Convention relating to the subject of the judiciary,
it is generally accepted that the decision to establish a federal
forum for cases involving aliens arose from two related concerns.
The first concern was that state and local judges were likely to be
swayed by local prejudices against foreig
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