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Commentary Instrumentalizing International Justice: Don't Halt the Bashir Case
Instrumentalizing International Justice: Don't Halt the Bashir Case
JURIST Staff
March 30, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Saira Mohamed of Columbia Law School says any decision by the UN Security Council to stop the International Criminal Court's proceedings against Sudanese President Omar Hassan al-Bashir by using its power under Article 16 of the Rome...

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Commentary Law at Sea: Challenges Facing Japan's Anti-piracy Mission
Law at Sea: Challenges Facing Japan's Anti-piracy Mission
JURIST Staff
March 25, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnists Hitoshi Nasu and Donald Rothwell of the ANU College of Law, Australian National University, say that while Japan's proactive approach towards fighting maritime piracy marks a significant step in its rehabilitation as a global power capable of...

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Commentary Challenges for Chaudhry: The Way Ahead for Pakistan's Reinstated Chief Justice
Challenges for Chaudhry: The Way Ahead for Pakistan's Reinstated Chief Justice
JURIST Staff
March 19, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Ali Khan of Washburn University School of Law says that while newly-reinstated Pakistani Chief Justice Iftikhar Chaudhry must continue to hold his country's Establishment accountable for breaches of the constitutional rights and freedoms of Pakistani citizens, he...

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Commentary America and the Rule of Law in Pakistan
America and the Rule of Law in Pakistan
JURIST Staff
March 12, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Special Guest Columnist Saeed Malik, a US citizen who is the younger brother of former Pakistan Supreme Bar Association president and lawyers' movement leader Muneer Malik, says that the Obama Administration should support Pakistan's lawyers and civil society by...

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Commentary The Supreme Court and Al-Marri: No Virtue Now in Judicial Passivity
The Supreme Court and Al-Marri: No Virtue Now in Judicial Passivity
JURIST Staff
March 5, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Bruce Miller of Western New England College School of Law says that despite the Obama administration's intent to criminally charge Ali Al-Marri in a US court, his challenge to his detention as an "enemy combatant" continues to...

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Commentary National Security Courts and Preventive Detention: A Bad and Unnecessary Idea
National Security Courts and Preventive Detention: A Bad and Unnecessary Idea
JURIST Staff
March 4, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Special Guest Columnists Representatives David Skaggs (D-CO) (1987-1999) and Mickey Edwards (R-OK) (1977-1993), members of the Constitution Project's Liberty and Security Committee, say that despite the Obama administration's welcome new approach to handling terrorism cases, the US government could...

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Commentary Mortgage Inequity: Why the Bailout is Missing the Boat
Mortgage Inequity: Why the Bailout is Missing the Boat
JURIST Staff
February 20, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Nancy Rapoport of the William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada Las Vegas, says that the housing bailout provisions of the recently announced stimulus package not only do not go far enough to cover mortgage...

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Commentary Judges Sentencing Children for Kickbacks: A Special Kind of Infamy
Judges Sentencing Children for Kickbacks: A Special Kind of Infamy
JURIST Staff
February 19, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist David Harris of the University of Pittsburgh School of Law says that in light of the damage done to the justice system, our collective belief in the rule of law, and to the persons and families involved,...

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Commentary Omar Khadr: Release, Repatriation, and Remedies
Omar Khadr: Release, Repatriation, and Remedies
JURIST Staff
February 18, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Special Guest Columnist Gail Davidson, Executive Director of Lawyers Rights Watch Canada, says that Canada and the US are duty-bound to act immediately to ensure that Canadian Guantanamo Bay detainee Omar Khadr is released and repatriated, his rights are...

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Commentary Scumbag Millionaires (Or, <i>Weekend at Bernie&#39;s</i> &#8212; Again)
Scumbag Millionaires (Or, Weekend at Bernie's — Again)
JURIST Staff
February 17, 2009 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Nancy Rapoport of the William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada Las Vegas, says that until we recognize that smart people can and will do some very dumb and even crooked things, no amount of...

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THIS DAY @ LAW

Frederick Douglass escaped from slavery

On September 3, 1838, abolitionist and human rights advocate Frederick Douglass escaped from slavery in Baltimore by posing as a free sailor and boarding a train bound for Philadelphia. Read Douglass' 1881 tract My Escape from Slavery.

Allies enter World War II with declarations of war against Germany

On September 3, 1939, World War II began for the Allies when the United Kingdom, France, New Zealand, and Australia declared war on Germany after it invaded Poland.
Learn more about the Second World War from the History Channel.

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