Since her first summer as a law student at Yale, Professor Jaya Ramji-Nogales’
legal career has taken her across international borders, put her at odds
with sovereign governments, and placed her in the thick of humanitarian
crises. She has documented and challenged human rights abuses in
Cambodia, India, and Uganda. Before entering into a more “traditional”
practice, Ramji-Nogales used a year-long international human rights
fellowship to partner with a South African lawyer in the creation of a
refugee law clinic at the University of the Witwatersrand in
Johannesburg. At every opportunity, she has worked to make law an
effective tool in the hands of people who otherwise would have none. And
now, Ramji-Nogales teaches her students at Temple how to do the same
thing.
“I have a deep interest in laws about crossing borders,” Professor Ramji-Nogales
explains. It’s the common thread running through her academic focus on
international law, which centers around human rights, refugee law, and
transitional justice. But she also teaches civil procedure and evidence, she
explains, “because these courses focus on procedural due process, and fair
procedure is crucial in guaranteeing fundamental human rights.” Her scholarship
focuses on the procedural rights of immigrants in the United States under
international human rights law, because, in her words, “these rights are not
strongly protected under U.S. law, so it makes sense to explore international
standards of justice.” Temple Law’s strong programs in international law and
public interest were significant motivations for Ramji-Nogales’ decision to
pursue her interests here.
One area of U.S. law in particular has come under Professor Ramji-Nogales’
critical gaze: asylum law and policy. Ramji-Nogales’ co-authored book, Refugee
Roulette: Disparities in Asylum Adjudication and Proposals for Reform, presents
data that reveal tremendous disparities in asylum approval rates throughout the
country. The study, which was reported on the front page of the
New York Times, found that asylum adjudication in the United States
appears to be tied to random factors influencing individual decision makers
rather than the merits of the actual asylum applications. In a follow-up study,
Ramji-Nogales is working with her Refugee Roulette co-authors to investigate
data on decision-making at the Department of Homeland Security’s Asylum Offices,
which is the first step in the U.S. asylum process.
But even as Professor Ramji-Nogales becomes immersed in the daily practices
of asylum adjudicators across the nation, she has steadfastly pursued inquiries
into her other areas of interest as well. An article on transitional justice
(the process by which societies account for crimes of mass violence), another
one on women, forced migration, and international criminal law, and a third on
reparations in Cambodia are all in various stages of completion. The last has
particular significance, not only because it involves her work as legal advisor
to the Documentation Center of Cambodia, but because she is co-writing it with
Temple Law student Toni Holness.
The DC-Cam, as the Documentation Center is popularly called, is responsible
for documenting potential evidence of crimes committed by the Khmer Rouge regime
for use in the genocide trials currently underway there. Professor Ramji-Nogales
first worked with the DC-Cam while in law school and has maintained a close
relationship with the organization, serving for over a decade as a legal
advisor. Because of this relationship, each year, the DC-Cam hires one Temple
Law student for a summer internship involving hands-on experience seeking
justice for those whose lives have been torn apart by the human rights abuses
they have suffered. It’s a transformative experience, compelling a richer
understanding of what it means to serve as a lawyer in the global community.
But for Temple students, the experience does not have to end there. As a
professor, Ramji-Nogales is deeply committed to engaging interested students in
scholarly work, often serving as an advisor for guided research papers or law
review notes. For students like Holness, who spent a summer at the DC-Cam, this
can mean an opportunity to join the global human rights community sooner rather
than later by gaining both scholarly recognition and valuable connections. “It’s
really about creating an opportunity for students to take what they’ve learned
and put it into practice,” says Ramji-Nogales. “Mentorship like this is
important for all law students, but it’s particularly necessary in navigating
the tricky field of human rights law.”
The opportunity to provide such mentorship is a big part of why Ramji-Nogales
became a law professor in the first place. “Becoming a lawyer is a big change,
and change is never easy. Law school can be really difficult for students,
especially women and minorities of all kinds. I like helping all of my students
to build confidence in their lawyering abilities, and to find the right career
path as they transition from law school to practice.” It’s an approach that has
resonated well at Temple Law, where Ramji-Nogales has found that her colleagues
often have an open-door policy “with students and with each other. You can
really discuss anything that’s on your mind – the Temple Law faculty is here to
help.”
In many ways, Professor Jaya Ramji-Nogales’ interest in mentoring students
mirrors her more academic pursuits. In both contexts, Ramji-Nogales is concerned
with mapping the complexities of migration – whether personal, professional,
geographic, or some combination – across the borders that demarcate all of our
lives. Because of her efforts and those of the many lawyers she’s trained,
refugees and immigrants the world over will have one more tool to use as they
make their perilous journeys: the law.