CDD Event: Federal Immigration Policy: Animus and Impacts
Thursday, October 16, 2025 12pm to 2am
About this Event
1 Campus Center Way, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003
https://www.umass.edu/dialogue/events/federal-immigration-policy-animus-and-impactsUMass Community, Democracy, and Dialogue invites Ragini Shah (Suffolk University) and Nicholas Valentino (University of Michigan) to the University of Massachusetts, Amherst to discuss what influences attitudes towards immigrants, how those attitudes are reflected in policy, and impacts both on the state level and our campus community. After opening comments, Shah and Valentino will engage in a discussion and Q&A moderated by Rebecca Hamlin, Professor of Legal Studies and Director of the Legal Studies Program.
Ragini Shah's scholarship examines immigration law from the perspective of those who experience its impacts. Her book Constructed Movements, Extraction and Resistance in Mexican Migrant Communities, offers insights from Mexican migrant communities on how migration is an extractive process and offers examples of organizing in Mexico designed to create alternatives to the migration as extraction cycle. Shah is a Clinical Professor of Law and founder and director of the Immigrant Justice Clinic. Over the past years, the Immigration Clinic has represented a number of individuals including immigrants detained by ICE facing removal, undocumented youth seeking to remain in the U.S., and workers seeking to vindicate their rights in the workplace. The clinic has also worked on a number of projects including helping community groups propose legislation, creating and delivering Know Your Rights during the Trump administration and beyond, and preparing guides for community organizers on the rights of undocumented immigrants.
Nicholas A. Valentino specializes in political psychological approaches to understanding public opinion formation, socialization, information seeking, and electoral participation. His research has focused on the intersecting roles of racial attitudes and public emotions, especially the distinct power of anger versus fear. He has also written extensively on the causes and consequences of empathy for ethnic outgroups. Valentine holds positions as the Donald R. Kinder Collegiate Professor of Political Science and Research Professor in the Center for Political Studies at the University of Michigan, and currently serves as a PI of the American National Election Studies (ANES).
Rebecca Hamlin's research focuses on law and immigration politics, with particular emphasis on migrant categorization and the concept of a refugee. Her published work has examined how the United States and other liberal democracies use administrative agencies and courts to adjudicate migration and citizenship questions, and the political responses to judicial involvement in migration matters. Hamlin currently serves as the Director of the Legal Studies Program here at UMass Amherst.