Angélica Cházaro

  • Associate Professor
  • Charles I. Stone Professor of Law
  • Associate Professor of Law

Contact

Phone: (206) 543-8754
Email: chazaro1@uw.edu

Education

J.D. 2006, Columbia B.A. magna cum laude 2001, Harvard

Areas of Expertise

Immigration and Refugee Law

Recent Courses

Course Number Course Name
Problems In Professional Responsibility
Critical Race Theory Seminar

Selected Publications

See the full list under the Publications tab below.

Professor Angélica Cházaro joined the law school faculty in 2013 as a visiting assistant professor. She teaches Critical Race Theory, Poverty Law, Professional Responsibility and courses on Immigration Law. Professor Cházaro earned her J.D. from Columbia Law School, where she received the Jane Marks Murphy Prize for Excellence in Clinical Advocacy and was named a Lowenstein Fellow. She was a Kent Scholar, a Stone Scholar, and an editor of the Columbia Human Rights Law Review. Before attending Columbia, Professor Cházaro earned a B.A. in Women's Studies from Harvard University.

Following law school, Professor Cházaro received a Ford Foundation fellowship to work with the Northwest Immigrant Rights Project (NWIRP) in Seattle. During her seven years at NWIRP she specialized in representing immigrant survivors of violence and directed one of the organization's offices in Eastern Washington, focusing on providing immigration legal services to farmworkers. Professor Cházaro served as a chief negotiator during a 56-day hunger strike at the Northwest Detention Center, representing immigrant detainees. She has been interviewed in national and international news outlets for her work on behalf of immigrants. She is a member of the Blue Ribbon Commission convened by the National Day Laborer's Organizing Network to provide the Executive Branch with recommendations on administrative relief for undocumented people.

Peer Reviewed Journals & Law Reviews

  • Angélica Cházaro, Rolling Back the Tide: Challenging the Criminalization of Immigrants in Washington State, 11 Seattle J. Soc. Just. 127-48 (2013).
  • Angélica Cházaro & Jennifer Casey, Getting Away with Murder: Guatemala’s Failure to Protect Women and Rodi Alvarado’s Quest for Safety, 17 Hastings Women’s L.J. 141-85 (2006).

Book Chapters

  • Angélica Cházaro, Jennifer Casey & Katherine Ruhl, Getting Away with Murder: Guatemala's Failure to Protect Women and Rodi Alvaradlo's Quest for Safety, in Terrorizing Women: Feminicide in the Americas 93-115 (Rosa-Linda Fregoso & Cynthia Bejarano eds., Duke University Press 2009), translated into Spanish and reprinted in Feminicidio en América Latina (Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, 2011).
  • Angélica Cházaro, Witnessing Memory and Surviving Domestic Violence: The Case of Rodi Alvarado Pen?a, in Passing Lines: Immigration And Sexuality (Bradley Epps, Keja Valens & Bill Johnson-González eds., Harvard University Press 2005).

Professional Publications

  • Angélica Cházaro & Elizabeth Dawson-Hahn, Mitigating the Health Consequences for Youth in Families Affected by Immigration Policy Changes: Opportunities for Health Professionals and Health Systems, JAMA Pediatrics, June 2019.
  • Angélica Cházaro, Free Our Future: An Immigration Policy Platform Beyond the Trump Era, Mijente, June 2018.

News Media


  • Panelist, with Andrea Ritchie, Mariame Kaba, Book Talk, American Constitution Society (November 14, 2022)
  • Speaker, "Challenges Facing Immigrant Youth in the Trump Era," Southwestern Law Review Immigration Symposium (February 1, 2019)
  • Panelist, The Question of Rights, University of Washington Honors Program (November 14, 2018)
  • Panelist, Reconstructing Our Democracy: A Mid-term's Post-Mortem & Call to Action, Carter Center (November 10, 2018)
  • Speaker, "Lawyering and Abolition," National Women’s Studies Association Annual Conference (November 10, 2018)
  • Speaker, "Immigration Enforcement in the Trump Era," Western Law Professors of Color Conference (October 19, 2018)
  • Speaker, "Protecting Immigrant Patients from Immigration Enforcement," UW Network of Underrepresented Residents and Fellows, (October 1, 2018)
  • Panelist, "Immigration Law," Presidential Power in 2017, ºìÌÒÊÓÆµ and Town Hall (February 1, 2017)
  • Panelist, "Antiviolence Movements in the Shadow of the Carceral State," Annual Meeting, Law & Society Association (May 31, 2015)
  • Speaker, "Addressing the Criminalization of LGBT People and People Living with HIV," Center for American Progress (May 1, 2014)
  • Speaker, "May Day Congressional Briefing on Immigrants’ Recommendations for Executive Action," National Day Laborer’s Organizing Network (May 1, 2014)
  • Speaker, "Northwest Detention Center Hunger Strike Causes and Consequences Teach-In," Northwest Detention Center (April 1, 2014)
  • Speaker, "Community Lawyering, What Does it Mean and How Can We Do More of It," ºìÌÒÊÓÆµ (March 3, 2014)
  • Panelist, "Being LGBT In the Legal Field," Diversity Week, ºìÌÒÊÓÆµ (February 3, 2014)
  • Speaker, "The End of Gay Politics," Seattle University (January 1, 2014)
  • Oct 03, 2024 | Source: YES! Magazine
  • Jul 07, 2023 | Source: The Stranger
  • Jun 05, 2023 | Source: South Seattle Emerald
  • Mar 21, 2023 | Source: Seattle Met
  • Sep 26, 2022 | Source: KNKX
  • Mar 31, 2022 | Source: South Seattle Emerald
  • Dec 21, 2021 | Source: Inside Philanthropy
  • Nov 23, 2021 | Source: KOMO News
  • Nov 23, 2021 | Source: The Associated Press
  • Nov 17, 2021 | Source: Freedom Dreams podcast
  • Nov 15, 2021 | Source: South Seattle Emerald
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  • Nov 11, 2021 | Source: The Stranger
  • Oct 28, 2021 | Source: The Stranger
  • May 21, 2021 | Source: The Seattle Times
  • Nov 24, 2020 | Source: South Seattle Emerald
  • Oct 29, 2020 | Source: Crosscut
  • Sep 10, 2020 | Source: The Seattle Times
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  • Aug 11, 2020 | Source: The Daily
  • Jul 17, 2020 | Source: Crosscut
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  • Jul 10, 2020 | Source: KUOW
  • Jul 09, 2020 | Source: MyNorthwest
  • Jul 09, 2020 | Source: KING 5
  • Jul 09, 2020 | Source: Associated Press
  • Jul 08, 2020 | Source: seattlepi.com
  • Jul 08, 2020 | Source: KOMO News
  • Jul 08, 2020 | Source: The Seattle Times
  • Jun 12, 2020 | Source: Crosscut