Sarah Rogerson

Richard P. Nathan Public Policy Fellow

Sarah Rogerson directs The Justice Center at Albany Law School. She is also the faculty director of the Immigration Law Clinic, in which students represent immigrant victims of crime, including child abuse and neglect, persecution, domestic violence, and sexual assault. Under her supervision, her students also represent wrongfully detained immigrants and regularly participate in legislative advocacy and community outreach initiatives. Before joining the faculty, Rogerson worked as a housing and immigrant rights public interest attorney in Newark, New Jersey, and in Dallas, Texas. Her scholarship addresses flaws in the administration of immigration law and policy, including intersections with domestic violence and international law. She has also been published on current issues such as crisis lawyering, education policy and gun safety, having direct lived experience with each of those topics. She is a New York State Municipal Police Instructor and is a regular panelist on WAMC Public Radio’s “The Roundtable.” In 2020, Rogerson was elected to a three-year term on the Niskayuna Central School District Board of Education, on which she serves as Vice President.

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Latest

Policy Overview in a Minute: Essays by the Institute on Immigrant Integration’s Scholars-in-Residence

December 10, 2024

Read short essays on the economic integration of immigrants from the Institute on Immigrant Integration Research and Policy's scholars-in-residence. Continue Reading...


Ep. 76 Asylum Seekers & Work Requirements

August 9, 2023

Rockefeller Institute Nathan Fellow Sarah Rogerson, an expert in immigration law and director of the Immigration Law Clinic and Edward P. Swyer Justice Center at Albany Law School, discusses the legal and logistical hurdles migrants face as they seek to enter the workforce. Continue Reading...


Ep. 42. Afghan Refugee Resettlement

October 6, 2021

Camille Mackler and Professor Sarah Rogerson discuss the status of the current refugee crisis, the challenges refugees and resettlement agencies will face in the coming months, and policy changes that may help ease the resettlement process. Continue Reading...