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Commentary Democratic Victory: 'A New Direction' on Checks and Balances?
Democratic Victory: 'A New Direction' on Checks and Balances?
JURIST Staff
November 8, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Peter Shane of Moritz College of Law, Ohio State University, says that Democrats taking over Congress in the wake of the mid-term elections should begin by reasserting constitutional checks and balances in a wide range of critical...

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Commentary The Hussein Verdict: Beyond Justice
The Hussein Verdict: Beyond Justice
JURIST Staff
November 7, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Lawrence Douglas, Professor of Law, Jurisprudence and Social Thought at Amherst College, says the trial of Saddam Hussein had little didactic value in Iraq for various reasons, but it could ironically have more impact in America on...

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Commentary Facing Down the Beast of Impunity: The Saddam Trial in Context
Facing Down the Beast of Impunity: The Saddam Trial in Context
JURIST Staff
November 7, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor David Crane of Syracuse University College of Law, former Chief Prosecutor for the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone, says that the Dujail crimes against humanity trial of Saddam Hussein before the Iraqi High Tribunal was hardly...

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Commentary War, Democracy and the Draft
War, Democracy and the Draft
JURIST Staff
November 7, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Geoffrey S. Corn, Lt. Col. US Army (Ret.) and former Special Assistant to the Judge Advocate General for Law of War Matters, now a professor at South Texas College of Law, says that Americans going to the...

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Commentary The Politics of Ignorance: Election Day Reflections
The Politics of Ignorance: Election Day Reflections
JURIST Staff
November 7, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Ilya Somin of the George Mason University School of Law says that while political ignorance among voters is more the byproduct of rational calculation than laziness or stupidity, one way to address the problem is to reduce...

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Commentary Saving the Rule of Law in Iraq: Move Saddam's Appeal Abroad
Saving the Rule of Law in Iraq: Move Saddam's Appeal Abroad
JURIST Staff
November 6, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Chibli Mallat, visiting professor at Princeton University and a prominent Middle East human rights lawyer who in 2003 turned down an invitation to join the Iraqi Special Tribunal that would judge Saddam Hussein, says that even given...

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Commentary The Saddam Hussein Verdict: An Abuse of Justice
The Saddam Hussein Verdict: An Abuse of Justice
JURIST Staff
November 6, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Special Guest Columnist Curtis Doebbler, an American member of Saddam Hussein's legal defense team and a professor of law at An-Najah National University on the Palestinian West Bank, says that the Dujail trial was one of the worst abuses...

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Commentary Stay Saddam's Death Sentence
Stay Saddam's Death Sentence
JURIST Staff
November 5, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Guest Columnist Michael Kelly of Creighton University School of Law says that the trials of Saddam Hussein should continue and his death sentence in the Dujail case should be stayed at least until two other key proceedings against him...

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Commentary Fences and Mushrooms Along the Border
Fences and Mushrooms Along the Border
JURIST Staff
October 26, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Michael A. Olivas of the University of Houston Law Center says that the Secure Fence Act signed into law by President Bush and authorizing the construction of a 700-mile barrier along part of the US border with...

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Commentary A Fish Called Jeffrey: 'Disappointed' after Enron
A Fish Called Jeffrey: 'Disappointed' after Enron
JURIST Staff
October 24, 2006 08:01:00 am

JURIST Contributing Editor Nancy Rapoport of the University of Houston Law Center says that the 24-year prison sentence handed down for former Enron CEO Jeffrey Skilling leaves us all disappointed, not necessarily in the sentence, but in the corporate conduct...

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THIS DAY @ LAW

Maurice Papon convicted of war crimes

On April 2, 1998, Maurice Papon was convicted of war crimes for his role in deporting French Jews to concentration camps during the Nazi occupation of France. Under German occupation, Papon served as the supervisor of the Service for Jewish Questions in Bordeaux from which he collaborated with the Nazi S.S. and oversaw the deportation of 1,560 Jewish men, women, and children to concentration camps.

Read an biography of Maurice Papon from the BBC.

Massachusetts enacted Vietnam antiwar bill

On April 2, 1970, the Governor of Massachusetts signed into law an anti-Vietnam War bill providing that no inhabitant of Massachusetts inducted into or serving in the armed forces "shall be required to serve" abroad in an armed hostility that had not been declared a war by Congress under Article I, Section 8, clause 11 of the United States Constitution.

Supporters of the legislation hoped that the US Supreme Court would seize on the obvious conflict that the bill created between state and federal law and would rule on the constitutionality of the Vietnam War itself, but the Court refused to exercise original jurisdiction, forcing the case into the lower federal courts. See Anthony D'Amato, Massachusetts In The Federal Courts: The Constitutionality Of The Vietnam War [PDF], 4 Journal of Law Reform (1970).

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