[1] On the other hand, some commentators state that a good deal of disparity is inevitable and that refugees and their advocates must "learn to live" with "unequal justice".
[4] The authors argue that their findings reveal an unacceptable level of disparities in grant rates, noting that the asylum adjudicators studied heard large numbers of cases from the same country in the same location over the same period of time.
[6] The study was also reported in the Atlantic Monthly[7] and many other media outlets, including the Atlanta Journal-Constitution,[8] the Christian Science Monitor,[9] the Dallas Morning News,[10] and the Miami Herald.
[11] The study has been cited by numerous prominent legal academics, including Prof. David Cole of the Georgetown University Law Center,[12] Judith Resnik,[13] and Cass Sunstein.
[20] The authors of the original "Refugee Roulette" study in the United States: Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Andrew I. Schoenholtz, Philip G. Schrag