Natsu Taylor Saito
Professor of LawPublications
Books
Natsu Taylor Saito, Meeting the Enemy: American Exceptionalism and International Law (NYU Press 2010).
Natsu Taylor Saito, From Chinese Exclusion to Guantanamo Bay: Plenary Power and the Prerogative State (University Press of Colorado 2007). | Call No. KF5060.S25 2007
Book Chapters / Collected Works
Natsu Taylor Saito, “Enhancing Whose Security? People of Color and the Post-September 11 Expansion of Law Enforcement and Intelligence Powers, in Race and Human Rights (Curtis Stokes ed., Michigan State University Press, 2008).
Natsu Taylor Saito, Black Seminoles, in Encyclopedia of American Indian History (2008).
Natsu Taylor Saito, Red, Black and Divided: Federal “Recognition” and the Imposition of Identity on the Seminole Nation, in Native Americans (Donald A. Grinde ed., CQ Press, 2002). | Call No. E93 .N32 2002
Articles and Other Contributions to Law Reviews and Scholarly Journals
Natsu Taylor Saito, Rebellious Lawyering in the Courts of the Conqueror: The Legacy of the Hirabayashi Coram Nobis Case, 11 Seattle J. Soc. Just. 89 (2012). | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Decolonization, Development, and Denial, 6 Fla. A & M U. L. Rev. 1 (2010). | Hein | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Internments, Then & Now: Constitutional Accountability in Post-9/11 America, 2 Duke F.L. & Soc. Change 71 (2010). | www
Natsu Taylor Saito, Human Rights, American Exceptionalism, and the Stories We Tell, 23 Emory Int'l L. Rev. 41 (2009). | LexisNexis | Westlaw | www | SSRN
Natsu Taylor Saito, Response to Alia Malek's "Dying with the Wrong Name": The Role of Law in Racializing & Erasing Arabs, 1 Geo. J.L. & Mod. Crit. Race Persp. 256 (2009). | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, At the Heart of the Law: Remedies for Massive Wrongs, 27 Rev. Litig. 281 (Winter 2008). | Hein | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Colonial Presumptions: The War on Terror and the Roots of American Exceptionalism, 1 Geo. J. L. Mod. Crit. Race Persp. 67 (2008). | LexisNexis | Westlaw | SSRN
Natsu Taylor Saito, Border Constructions: Immigration Enforcement and Territorial Presumptions, 10 J. Gender Race & Just. 193 (2007). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Reflections on Homeland and Security, New Centennial Rev., Spring 2006, at 239.
Natsu Taylor Saito, Returning to First Principles: International Human Rights as U.S. Constitutionalism, 1 FIU L. Rev. 45 (2006). | LexisNexis
Natsu Taylor Saito, Beyond the Citizen/Alien Dichotomy: Liberty, Security, and the Exercise of Plenary Power, 14 Temp. Pol. & Civ. Rts. L. Rev. 389 (2005). | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Interning the “Non-Alien” Other: The Illusory Protections of Citizenship, 68 Law & Contemp. Probs. 173 (2005). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, The Costs of Homeland Security, 93 Radical Hist. Rev. 53 (2005). | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Beyond Reparations: Accommodating Wrongs or Honoring Resistance, 1 Hastings Race & Poverty L.J. 27 (2003). | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, For "Our" Security: Who is an American and What is Protected by Enhanced Law Enforcement & Intelligence Powers?, 2 Seattle J. Soc. Just. 23 (2003). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, The Enduring Effect of the Chinese Exclusion Cases: The “Plenary Power” Justification for On-Going Abuses of Human Rights, 10 Asian L.J. 13 (2003). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Symposium, Asserting Plenary Power Over the “Other”: Indians, Immigrants, Colonial Subjects, and Why U.S. Jurisprudence Needs to Incorporate International Law, 20 Yale L. & Pol'y Rev. 427 (2002). | Hein | LexisNexis
Natsu Taylor Saito, The Plenary Power Doctrine: Subverting Human Rights in the Name of Sovereignty, 51 Cath. U. L. Rev. 1115 (2002). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Whose Liberty? Whose Security? The USA PATRIOT ACT in the Context of COINTELPRO and Unlawful Repression of Political Dissent, 81 Or. L. Rev. 1051 (2002). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw | www
Natsu Taylor Saito, Will Force Trump Legality after September 11? American Jurisprudence Confronts the Rule of Law, 17 Geo. Immigr. L.J. 1 (2002). | Hein | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Symbolism under Siege: Japanese American Redress and the “Racing” of Arab Americans as “Terrorists”, 8 Asian L.J. 1 (2001). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, From Slavery and Seminoles to AIDS in South Africa: An Essay on Race and Property in International Law, 45 Vill. L. Rev. 1135 (2000). | Hein | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, The Symbolism and Substance of Redress and Reconstruction, 2000-2003 Third World Legal Stud. 161 (2000-2003). | Hein
Natsu Taylor Saito, Critical Race Theory as International Human Rights Law, 93 Proc. Ann. Meeting � Am. Soc'y Int'l L. 228 (1999).
Natsu Taylor Saito, Crossing the Border: The Interdependence of Foreign Policy & Racial Justice in the United States, 1 Yale Hum. Rts. & Dev. L.J. 53 (1998). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Symposium, Justice Held Hostage: U.S. Disregard for International Law in the WWII Internment of Japanese Peruvians - a Case Study, 40 B.C. L. Rev. 275 (1998-1999) (19 B. C. Third World L. J. 275 (joint Issue)). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Model Minority, Yellow Peril: Functions of Foreignness in the Constructions of Asian American Legal Identity, 4 Asian L.J. 71 (1997). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Symposium, Alien and Non-Alien Alike: Citizenship, “Foreignness,” and Racial Hierarchy in American Law, 76 Or. L. Rev. 261 (1997). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Taylor Saito, Beyond Civil Rights: Considering “Third Generation” International Human Rights Law in the United States, 28 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev. 387 (1996). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Saito Jenga, Unconscious: The ‘Just Say No’ Response to Racism, 81 Iowa L. Rev. 1503 (1996). | Hein | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Natsu Saito Jenga, Finding Our Voices, Teaching Our Truth: Reflections on Legal Pedagogy and Asian American Identity, 3 Aian Pac. Am. L.J. 81 (1995). | LexisNexis | Westlaw
Articles and Other Contributions to Non-Academic Publications
Natsu Taylor Saito, International Law: America's Selective Self-Exemption, L.A. Daily J., Apr. 16, 2010, at 6.
Electronic Publications
Natsu Taylor Saito, "Like a Disembodied Shade": Colonization and Internment as the American Way of Life, Bad Subjects (2004), available at http://bad.eserver.org/issues/2004/71/saito.html. | www
Natsu Taylor SaitoE-mail: nsaito@@E R A S Egsu.edu
Office:
429 Urban Life
Phone: (404) 413-9156
Fax: (404) 413-9225