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Hybrid | Not Just in Outer Space: A story of 'aliens' in Nationality Law

20 February 2025, 6:00 pm–7:00 pm

UFO and an alien on a rick formation

This lecture will be delivered by Professor Devyani Prabhat, as part of the Current Legal Problems Lecture Series 2024-25

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Organiser

UCL Laws

Speaker: (University of Bristol)

°äï»Ïز¹¾±°ù: Lord David Lloyd-Jones (The Supreme Court)

About the lecture

The idea of aliens in the immigration context is widespread. The word ‘aliens’ is found in immigration and nationality legislation as well as case law in various countries including the UK and USA. Why is this so? Was it not sufficient to call ‘outsiders’ foreigners or non-citizens? What does this concept of ‘alien’ mean in nationality law? Are there many kinds of ‘aliens’? This lecture will look into the historical origins of the term and its subsequent conceptual development and impact on global migration through analysis of case law and archival material. It will also unpack the recent controversies in the use of the term ‘alien’ such as the efforts of the Biden administration to remove the word in US nationality processes as well as the use of the term in a pejorative manner in politics. Is this now an antiquated word reflective of past values which should become extinct in modern nationality and citizenship contexts or does it still have a pragmatic (or symbolic) purpose not quite served by other terminology? In the age of multiple-nationality and existing free/ permitted movement regimes, perhaps an alien is just one we are yet to encounter in outer space, but we mistake for one of our own shared humanity in the meanwhile. This lecture is the story of such human ‘aliens’ in nationality law.

About the speaker

Professor Devyani Prabhat is a Professor of Law at University of Bristol Law School, UK, with research interests in migration law and citizenship and with legal practice experience in constitutional law. She is an ESRC research project PI on British Citizenship and an AHRC project team grant holder on maternal/reproductive health care for minority and migrant women. She has written a number of monographs and edited works on citizenship and immigration law. Her monograph Unleashing the Force of Law: Legal Mobilization, National Security, Basic Freedoms (Palgrave Macmillan) won the Birks Prize for Outstanding Legal Scholarship (Society of Legal Scholars UK and Ireland). Her book with Policy Press, Britishness, Belonging and Citizenship is available at Open Access via this ). Her two most recent books are Children’s Rights, ‘Foreign Fighters’, Counter-Terrorism: Children of Nowhere (co-authored, Edward Elgar, September 2024) and Migrating Borders (University of London/University of Chicago Press, forthcoming 2025).

She serves on the Executive Committee of the UK Society of Legal Scholars (re-elected for second term in 2022), the Advisory Board of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, and the editorial board of journals (e.g. Social and Legal Studies, Human Rights Law Quarterly). She is the Post Graduate Director at University of Bristol Law School, the Co-Director for the Centre for Socio-legal Studies (Bristol) and is the founder co-president of UK South Asian Legal Scholars Association (UKSALSA). She has served on ESRC and AHRC peer review colleges and as Associate Director of Border Criminologies (Oxford University) in the recent past.

About Current Legal Problems

The Current Legal Problems (CLP) lecture series and annual volume was established over fifty five years ago at the Faculty of Laws, University College London and is recognised as a major reference point for legal scholarship.

Book your place

You can attend this event in-person at »Ê¼Ò»ªÈË Faculty of Laws (Bentham House,Ìý4-8 Endsleigh Gardens,ÌýLondonÌýWC1H 0EG) or alternatively you can join via a live stream.

Please make sure you choose the correct ticket when booking your place.

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