Top row: Stephen Bainbridge, Stuart Banner, Devon Carbado, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Scott Cummings. Middle row: Ingrid Eagly, Charyl harris, Jerry Kang, Russell Korobkin, Lynn LoPucki. Bottom row: Jennifer Mnookin, Hiroshi Motomura, Ral Raustiala, Eugene Volokh, Adam Winkler.
Top row: Stephen Bainbridge, Stuart Banner, Devon Carbado, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Scott Cummings. Middle row: Ingrid Eagly, Cheryl Harris, Jerry Kang, Russell Korobkin, Lynn LoPucki. Bottom row: Jennifer Mnookin, Hiroshi Motomura, Kal Raustiala, Eugene Volokh

Sixteen members of the UCLA School of Law faculty have been recognized as leaders of legal scholarship based on the impact of their research and writing. The total is a new high for UCLA Law.

UCLA Law alumna Alicia Minana de Lovelace

UCLA School of Law alumna Alicia Miñana de Lovelace ’87 has been named chair-elect of the UCLA Foundation Board of Directors, which oversees $5.1 billion in total assets. She succeeds Craig Ehrlich on July 1.

LOS ANGELES, CA – The Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law is thrilled to welcome Talia Inlender, one of the nation’s leading immigration lawyers and an expert on the rights of people incarcerated by immigration authorities, as its inaugural Deputy Director.

Founded in 2020, the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law expands the law school’s role as a national leader in immigration law and policy. CILP generates innovative ideas at the intersection of immigration scholarship and practice; serves as a hub for transforming those ideas into meaningful changes in immigration policy at the local, state, and national level; and empowers students with unique opportunities for experiential learning through work with academics, practitioners, policymakers, and activists.

CILP Leadership

Ahilan T. ArulananthamAhilan T. Arulanantham

Faculty Co-Director

Ahilan T. Arulanantham is Professor from Practice and Co-Director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law. Ahilan teaches in the law school and also maintains an active litigation practice. He has successfully litigated a number of cases involving immigrants’ rights, including Franco-Gonzalez v. Holder, the first case to establish a federal right to appointed counsel for any group of immigrants; Jennings v. Rodriguez, which secured the due process rights of immigrants jailed for years while litigating their deportation cases; and Ramos v. Nielsen, a challenge to the Trump Administration's plan to end the TPS program. Ahilan has argued three times before the United States Supreme Court, most recently in the fall of 2021 on behalf of Americans of the Muslim faith who were targeted by the federal government for surveillance because of their religion in FBI v. Fazaga.

Prior to joining UCLA, Ahilan was Senior Counsel at the ACLU in Los Angeles, where he worked for nearly twenty years. In 2016 Ahilan was named a MacArthur Foundation Fellow.

Read Ahilan T. Arulanantham's faculty biography.


Sandra Hernandez

Director of Strategic Communications

Sandra Hernandez is Director of Strategic Communications at the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law. She has spent more than two decades in communications and media. Most recently, as vice president of communications and media at MALDEF (Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund), she led communications efforts around the organization’s defense of DACA, voting rights, and challenges to the integrity of the 2020 Census. Sandra previously worked as director of communications at the ACLU of Southern California.

A veteran journalist, she wrote about immigration and criminal justice as an editorial writer at Los Angeles Times. As a staff writer at the Los Angeles Daily Journal, she broke national stories about the U.S. immigration detention system, including a covert federal program to forcibly drug and deport detained immigrants. She has reported from Latin America on Colombia’s civil war, Venezuela’s political turmoil, and U.S. deportations to Haiti.

She served as an editor of Underground America and En las Sombras, a collection of oral histories of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. The collection was published as part of The Voice of Witness Book Series that uses first person narratives to document human rights issues.

She was born in Colombia and raised in Southern California. She is a graduate of UCLA and Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.


Talia InlenderTalia Inlender

Deputy Director

Talia Inlender is Deputy Director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law. Talia teaches the Immigrants’ Rights Policy Clinic and plays a lead role in advancing CILP’s research, advocacy, and litigation. During her career, Talia has litigated cases on behalf of immigrants before Immigration Judges; the Board of Immigration Appeals; and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. She has been co-counsel in transformative immigrants’ rights litigation, including: Franco-Gonzalez v. Holder, the first lawsuit to establish a right to government-appointed counsel for a class of immigrants with serious mental disabilities; F.L.B. (formerly J.E.F.M.) v. Lynch and C.J.L.G. v. Barr, lawsuits to vindicate children’s right to counsel in immigration proceedings; and International Refugee Assistance Project v. Kelly, a lawsuit challenging the detention of an Afghan family entering on Special Immigrant Visas during the so-called “Muslim Ban.” Talia has also played a pivotal role in advocacy to expand local and state funding for legal representation in removal proceedings.

Prior to joining CILP, Talia spent 13 years in the Immigrants’ Rights Project at Public Counsel, where she launched and led the agency’s detained deportation defense program.

Read Talia Inlender's faculty biography.


Hiroshi MotomuraHiroshi Motomura

Faculty Co-Director

Hiroshi Motomura is the Susan Westerberg Prager Distinguished Professor of Law and Faculty Co-Director of the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law. He is the author of Immigration Outside the Law (Oxford 2014), Americans in Waiting (Oxford 2006), and he is the co-author of Immigration and Citizenship: Process and Policy (West 9th ed. 2021). He has received several university teaching awards and is one of 26 U.S. law professors profiled in What the Best Law Teachers Do (Harvard 2013). He received a Guggenheim Fellowship for his current book project, Borders and Belonging: Toward a Fair Immigration Policy (Oxford 2025). And perhaps most significantly, he is featured in the Try Guys video, The Try Guys Try Immigrating to America.

Read Hiroshi Motomura's faculty biography.


CILP Staff

 

Chloe LinChloe Lin

Program Coordinator

Chloe Lin is the Program Coordinator for the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law. Prior to joining UCLA, she was the Public Programs Assistant for the Harvard Museums of Science & Culture. She has also worked as Project Coordinator for the Chinese Historical Society of New England and Marketing and Communications Associate for the Old North Church & Historic Site. Chloe holds a BA in History from Smith College and a graduate certificate in Museum Studies from the Harvard Extension School.


Sofía López Franco

Staff Attorney

Sofía López Franco (she/her/hers) is a staff attorney with the Center for Immigration Law and Policy (CILP) at the UCLA School of Law. Prior to joining CILP, Sofía was an Immigrant Justice Corps (IJC) fellow at the Bronx Defenders, where she worked at the intersection of the immigration and criminal legal systems, providing direct representation in immigration proceedings and Padilla advisals to noncitizen clients. Before joining the Bronx Defenders, Sofía graduated cum laude from New York University School of Law, where she was a Latinx Rights Scholar and received the Christian Jarecki Memorial Prize for her outstanding work and commitment to a law clinic. During law school, Sofía was a part of the Immigrant Rights Clinic and worked on federal litigation challenging the conditions in and use of ICE detention, unlawful deportations, the misapplication of asylum law.

Sofía received her B.A. in Political Science and Legal Studies from Northwestern University and is fluent in Spanish. She is currently licensed to practice law in New York and California.

***MEDIA ADVISORY***

Supreme Court to Determine Whether the FBI Can Be Held Accountable for Secretly Spying on Americans Because of Their Religious Beliefs

Oral Arguments and Post-argument Press Conference Will Be Livestreamed

 

FOR PLANNING PURPOSES

November 5, 2021

 

CONTACTS: 

Allegra Harpootlian, 303-748-4051, aharpootlian@aclu.org 

UCLA Law Professor E. Tendayi Achiume

UCLA School of Law professor E. Tendayi Achiume has received a faculty chair appointment that recognizes her global leadership in scholarship and advocacy for human rights and the dignity of migrants and refugees around the world. She is now the inaugural holder of the Alicia Miñana Chair in Law, which was designed to support a faculty member preferably with interests at the intersection of human rights and immigration or migration law.

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