Explaining Asylum Law Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Applying QCA to Case Law
2.1. The Confluences of Boolean Logic for QCA and Legal Reasoning
2.2. Constructing Case Populations
2.3. Calibrating Data
3. A QCA Analysis of Appellate Court Asylum Decisions
3.1. Constructing the Case Population
3.2. Family-Membership as a Grounds for Seeking Relief from Persecution
3.3. Describing the Case Population
3.4. Explaining Decisions on Cases with a Kinship-Based Protected Ground
4. Discussion
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Circuit Court | Remand Rate for All Asylum Cases (N = 319) | Remand Rate for Kinship Cases (N = 35) | Kinship Cases Remanded | Kinship Cases Denied | Democratic Appointees |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2nd | 29% | 100% | 5 | 0 | 64% |
4th | 17% | 100% | 2 | 0 | 59% |
1st | 12.5% | 100% | 1 | 0 | 50% |
3rd | 32% | 100% | 1 | 0 | 43% |
9th | 18% | 50% | 2 | 2 | 65% |
6th | 8% | 33% | 2 | 6 | 35% |
7th | 22% | n/a * | 0 | 0 | 25% |
10th | 0% | 0% | 0 | 1 | 53% |
8th | 0% | 0% | 0 | 1 | 12.5% |
5th | 4% | 0% | 0 | 6 | 41% |
11th | 6% | 0% | 0 | 6 | 50% |
Sociopolitical Factors | |
Partisan Composition of the Judiciary (PartisanCourt) | Proportion of Democratic appointees in each court. |
Partisan Composition of Case Panel (PartisanCase) | Proportion of Democratic appointees in the panel of judges that heard each case. |
Gender Composition of the Judiciary (Gender Court) | Proportion of female judges in each court. |
Gender of Case Panel (GenderPanel) | Proportion of females in the panel of judges that heard each case. |
Immigrant Constituency (Immigration) | Size of the foreign-born population in states in which each judge from the case panel resides. |
State Electoral Politics (StatePolitics) | Partisan voting patterns in the state in which each judge from the case panel resides. |
Patterns of Decision Making | |
Court Specific Patterns of Decision-Making (CourtPattern) | Proportion of cases remanded by each court in the large case group (N = 319). |
Case Attributes | |
Domestic Violence (Domestic) | Did the case involve a claim of persecution involving domestic violence? |
Gang Violence (Gang) | Did the case involve a claim of persecution involving gang violence? |
Jurisprudential Factors | |
Credibility | Was the testimony of the petitioner deemed credible by the court? |
Nexus | Did the court decide there was a plausible relationship between the persecution suffered and the family-based protected ground? |
Future Persecution | Did the court determine that the petitioner will likely suffer future persecution if forced to return? |
Past Persecution | Did the court determine that the petitioner had a plausible claim of past persecution? |
Jurisprudential Criteria Specific to Kinship-Based Persecution | |
Kinship PSG Legally Cognizable (PSGCognizable) | Did the court issue statements in defense of the legal cognizability of the petitioner’s kinship-based PSG? |
Immediate Family (Immediate) | Did the definition of particular group membership involve immediate family relations? |
Nuclear Family (Nuclear) | Did the definition of the particular group membership involve nuclear family relations? |
Attenuation of Kinship Ties (Attenuate) | Degree to which particular group membership involved extended kinship/family members. |
Hypothesis: Case Outcome = State Politics * CourtPattern * Credibility * Nexus * FuturePersecution * PastPersecution | |||
Raw Coverage | Unique Coverage | Consistency | |
Recipe 1 | |||
Nexus * Credibility * FuturePersecution * | 0.438462 | 0.438462 | 0.857142 |
PastPersecution * CourtPattern * StatePolitics | |||
Recipe 2 | |||
Nexus * Credibility * FuturePersecution * | 0.0730769 | 0.073077 | 0.826087 |
~PastPersecution * CourtPattern * StatePolitics | |||
Solution Coverage | 0.511539 | ||
Solution Consistency | 0.858064 |
Hypothesis | Remand Decisions Explained (Remand Coverage) | Solution Coverage (for All Case Outcomes) | Solution Consistency |
---|---|---|---|
Nexus * Credibility * CourtPattern | 0.69 | 0.742308 | 0.897674 |
Nexus * Past Persecution * CourtPattern | 0.69 | 0.684615 | 0.890000 |
Nexus * Credibility | 0.77 | 0.811538 | 0.871901 |
Nexus * Past Persecution | 0.77 | 0.823077 | 0.795539 |
Nexus * CourtPattern | 0.77 | 0.742308 | 0.897674 |
Nexus | 0.85 | 0.880769 | 0.773648 |
Court Pattern | 0.77 | 0.768924 | 0.742308 |
1 | Also noting that there are applications of gamma for multivariate analysis (Rahayu et al. 2020), though these models still do not allow for the heterogeneity of causal conditions that is typical for QCA analyses. |
2 | The decisions of U.S. immigration judges may be oral or written, per 8 CFR § 1240.12; accessed via the Cornell University Legal Information Institute, https://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/8/1240.12 (accessed on 31 May 2024). |
3 | These confluences of legal reasoning and Boolean logic also surface in precursors to Boolean logic that date to the 18th century. Leibniz who is often cited as an influence on Boole (and whose work can be described as an attempt to both perfect and transcend Aristotlean logic) also had an interest in legal theory, and had a formative influence on the legal formalism of the 19th century (Berkowitz 2005; Jourdain 1916). |
4 | I made this distinction by calculating the percentage of remand decisions granted by each court for the large group of cases (N = 319) and divided the courts into each group depending on whether they fell above or below the average remand rate for the entire group (see Table 1 for a description of remand rates for each court). |
5 | Also noting that the argument I have cited from Li and Ma (2019) aligns with the realist position, affirmed by Schneider (2018). Schneider advises that tests for necessity and sufficiency should be treated as separate matters, and that other criteria besides empirical consistency (i.e., the observed consistency score) can be used to determine inclusion of factors in tests for sufficiency (i.e., hypothesis testing). Hence, Schneider advocates for a higher bar for empirical consistency (of 0.9) but also insists that empirical relevance, and conceptual meaningfulness can be used to weigh decisions about factors to include in hypothesis testing. Thiem (2017), in contrast, advocates for empirical consistency as the sole criterion but also allows for a lower bar (of 0.75). In practice, many QCA researchers use some combination of all of this advice, with researchers varying according to whether they use a a “low bar” (0.75) or “high bar” (0.9) for empirical consistency, but still accounting for empirical relevance and conceptual meaningfulness in their decision making processes. In my case, I used a “low bar” of empirical consistency to make my final decisions about factors to include in my initial hypothesis, but with the understanding that all of these factors were excerpted from a larger group (see Table 2) that had been vetted for their empirical relevance and/or conceptual meaningfulness. |
6 | The observed consistency scores for the factors that I included in my initial hypothesis were as follows: StatePolitics (0.723), CourtPattern (0.7692), Credibility (0.8462), Nexus (0.8807), FuturePersecution (0.7423), and PastPersecution (0.7423). I justified the inclusion of factors with the weakest neccesity scores (of 0.7423) because of their conceptual and empirical relevance to the analysis. I selected StatePolitics because it was important to include at least one sociopolitical factor in the initial hypothesis (all the other sociopolitical factors exhibited much weaker scores and as noted in the concluding discussion, the superior explanatory power of “home state” politics has been corroborated by other studies). Future and Past Persecution were included because they are widely regarded as important features of asylum jurisprudence (see footnote 5 for more context on these selection criteria). |
7 | For this discussion, I am describing causal recipes that are subsets of my hypothesis, but QCA researchers (Rutten and Rubinson 2022) also use the term “causal recipe” to refer to any combination of factors that is used to explain an outcome (which may include a starting hypothesis or the optimal casual solution that results from your analysis). |
8 | A test for necessity was conducted using socipolitical factors as causal conditions and jurisprudential criteria as outcomes. The results indicated a likely causal relationship (based on set–subset analysis) between the following factors (using a “low bar”for assessing causal salience, see note 5). Partisan composition of the entire court had an influence on nexus decisions (0.756757); partisan composition of the judicial panel that heard each case had an influence on nexus decisions (0.766892) and decisions about the viability of past perspecution (0.777494) and likelihood of future persecution (0.785408); and finally, the partisan electoral voting trends of the home-states of the judiciary had an influence on decisions about likelihood of future persection (0.845494). |
9 | The odds ratio that Braaten and Braaten (2023, p. 70) reported for the logistic regression for “County Democratic President Vote” ranged from 23.88 to 130.51 for their four models, compared to the odds ratio for Trump era decisions (0.906–1.35), Immigration Judge Party (1.41–1.50), and Immigration Judge Ideology (1.09–1.11). N = 12,826. |
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Kretsedemas, P. Explaining Asylum Law Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis. Laws 2024, 13, 53. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040053
Kretsedemas P. Explaining Asylum Law Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis. Laws. 2024; 13(4):53. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040053
Chicago/Turabian StyleKretsedemas, Philip. 2024. "Explaining Asylum Law Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis" Laws 13, no. 4: 53. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040053
APA StyleKretsedemas, P. (2024). Explaining Asylum Law Using Qualitative Comparative Analysis. Laws, 13(4), 53. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040053