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Lenni B. Benson
Professor of Law
Associate Dean for Professional Development
In July 2007, Professor Benson became Associate Dean for Professional Development. Dean Benson will oversees offices of Student Life, Career Services, and Public Interest and Community Service. A champion of students and alumni, Dean Benson will focus on helping students enhance their professional prospects through mentoring, networking, and skills development.
Previously, she was a leader of New York Law School’s Justice Action Center, where she pulled a diverse group of activist faculty together to offer students the opportunity to get directly involved in public interest and advocacy work. The Justice Action Center does not focus on only one aspect of individual rights.
Dean Benson specializes in immigration law and political asylum and is nationally recognized in the field. In 1999, the American Immigration Lawyers Association named Professor Benson the outstanding professor in immigration law based on her contributions to the professional and scholarly development of the field and her role as a mentor of students and young attorneys.
She has written several articles critically examining recent attempts to curtail immigrant rights. In particular, she was a leader in challenging Congressional attempts to curtail federal court judicial review of immigration decisions and has authored or coauthored numerous briefs of amici curiae on this topic.
Her work in this area continues as Congress most recently restricted immigrants’ ability to use the writ of habeas corpus. She organized a Law Review symposium entitled “Seeking Review: Immigration and Federal Court Jurisdiction,” held in the fall of 2005 at New York Law School.
Professor Benson has also written several articles about problems in the legal immigration system. Her article, “Breaking Bureaucratic Borders: A Necessary Step Toward Immigration Law Reform” (Administrative Law Review), examines the problems with the administrative structure of the agencies involved in immigration issues. It won New York Law School’s 2002 Otto L. Walter Faculty Writing Award.
Her article “Invisible Workers” (North Carolina University Law School Journal of International Law and Commercial Regulation (May 2002)) discusses the problem of underenforced labor law and the problems of measuring undocumented migration. She has also written about the fallacy of using a national labor market test in immigration policy in “The Myth of Alien Labor Certification,” a chapter in Cross Border Human Resources, Labor and Employment Issues, 54th Annual Conference on Labor, New York University School of Law’s Center on Labor and Employment Law (2005).
Professor Benson’s article “Separate, Unequal and Alien: Comments on the Limits of Brown,” (49 New York Law School Law Review 727 (2005)) concerns the deportation of Robert Galvan, a labor and community leader in California who was ordered deported a few weeks after the landmark decision in Brown v. Board of Education. She questions the Supreme Court’s reluctance to protect long term resident aliens from governmental prejudice and discrimination.
Professor Benson is a recognized expert and frequent lecturer on business immigration topics, having gained practical experience as a partner in the international law firm Bryan Cave LLP, where her twelve years of practice focused on immigration. She is an active participant in immigrant rights projects coordinated by the National Lawyers Guild and the American Civil Liberties Union, and she serves on the board of the Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law Foundation and is a trustee emeritus for the American Immigration Law Foundation.
She says her continued contact with immigration and political asylum cases, through pro bono work and active participation in the bar associations, allows her to incorporate current case law into her classroom teaching. “In New York, thirty-six percent of the population is foreign born. Immigration law has an impact on almost every aspect of the legal issues touching people’s lives. My students bring real life immigration issues into the classroom every day. It is a dynamic environment for active learning,” Professor Benson says.
Professor Benson is currently working on a book focusing on the historical development of immigration policy in the U.S. by examining prominent individuals who have been the subject of immigration proceedings or the catalyst for legislative reform. Some of those individuals include Emma Goldman, deported in 1919 for her anarchist political activities, and Harry Bridges, a labor organizer and prominent leader whom the government tried to remove for more than 25 years. In the spring of 2005 she addressed a war and terrorism conference at the West Point Military Academy about the Red Scare Deportation Era and the lessons for today.
Professor Benson lives in New York with her husband John Wellington and their two children, Max and Lily.
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Contact information:
T: 212-431-2336
F: 212-431-1864
E: lbenson@nyls.edu
O: A521
Assistant: Culley Johnson
T: 212-431-2347
E: cjohnson@nyls.edu
O: A-5th floor
Education:
Arizona State, B.S. 1980 cum laude, J.D. 1983 cum laude (Law Review, Managing Editor).
Courses:
Administrative Law
Civil Procedure
Immigration Law
Immigration Practice
Seminar & Workshop
Justice Action Center
Colloquium
Refugee and Asylum Law
At New York Law School since 1994.
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