Jurist
DONATE NOW
  • News ▾
    • All Legal News
    • US Legal News
    • World Legal News
    • This Day @ Law
  • Dispatches ▾
    • All Dispatches
    • Afghanistan
    • Canada
    • EU
    • Ghana
    • India
    • Iran
    • Israel
    • Italy
    • Kazakhstan
    • Kenya
    • Myanmar
    • Pakistan
    • Peru
    • Romania
    • Sri Lanka
    • Taiwan
    • UK
    • Ukraine
    • US
  • Commentary ▾
    • All Commentary
    • Faculty Commentary
    • Professional Commentary
    • Student Commentary
  • Features ▾
    • All Features
    • Explainers
    • Long Reads
    • Multimedia
    • Interviews
  • Topics
  • Rule of Law ▾
    • Materials
    • Podcasts
  • About ▾
    • FAQ
    • Staff
    • Awards
    • Apply
    • Journalist in Residence
    • Board of Directors
    • Contact Us
  • Donate ▾
    • Why Support JURIST?
    • Donate
    • Honor Roll
News NGO warns of potential for massive corruption in Iraq
NGO warns of potential for massive corruption in Iraq
D. Wes Rist
March 16, 2005 09:32:00 am

The rebuilding process in Iraq could turn into the largest example of corruption and bribery in the modern world according to the annual Global Corruption Report issued Wednesday by Transparency International . TI warned...

READ MORE ▸
News New Iraqi parliament sworn in amid attacks
New Iraqi parliament sworn in amid attacks
D. Wes Rist
March 16, 2005 09:14:00 am

Surrounded by heavy security, the 275 Iraqis elected in January to the nation's first independent parliament in 50 years were sworn in Wednesday, even as several bombs were detonated in the area, attempting to...

READ MORE ▸
News International brief ~ ICC holds first-ever hearing
International brief ~ ICC holds first-ever hearing
D. Wes Rist
March 15, 2005 09:56:00 am

Leading the international brief, the International Criminal Court held its first-ever hearing Tuesday, a status conference focusing on the need for witness protection and evidence preservation in the investigation of Chief Prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo ...

READ MORE ▸
News Hong Kong opposition protests constitutional interpretation
Hong Kong opposition protests constitutional interpretation
D. Wes Rist
March 14, 2005 09:48:00 am

Opposition members in Hong Kong's legislature expressed outrage Monday at the weekend announcement that the elected successor to Tung Chee-Hwa, Hong Kong's former executive who resigned last Thursday , would only serve the remainder of Tung's...

READ MORE ▸
News Zimbabwe high court overturns newspaper ban
Zimbabwe high court overturns newspaper ban
D. Wes Rist
March 14, 2005 09:48:00 am

The Supreme Court of Zimbabwe Monday quashed an order from the state Media Commission denying the independent newspaper Daily News a license to publish. Chief Justice Godfrey Chidyausiku advised the Harare paper, banned since September...

READ MORE ▸
News Taiwan considers legislative response to Chinese anti-secession law
Taiwan considers legislative response to Chinese anti-secession law
D. Wes Rist
March 14, 2005 09:26:00 am

Taiwan's ruling Democratic Progressive Party announced a draft bill Monday that would give the President of Taiwan the power to take action to "safeguard Taiwan's sovereignty and territory" - if necessary, without legislative approval. The draft legislation,...

READ MORE ▸
News Israel to remove 24 illegal West Bank outposts
Israel to remove 24 illegal West Bank outposts
D. Wes Rist
March 14, 2005 08:47:00 am

Following up on a report submitted last week to Prime Minister Ariel Sharon , the Israeli Cabinet Sunday agreed to remove the 24 Jewish outposts established on the Palestinian West Bank since Sharon took power in March 2001....

READ MORE ▸
News Bosnia Serb paramilitary leader tranferred to Hague detention center
Bosnia Serb paramilitary leader tranferred to Hague detention center
D. Wes Rist
March 14, 2005 08:28:00 am

Gojko Jankovic, a Bosnian Serb paramilitary leader, was transferred to the detention facility for the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia Monday after surrendering to Serbian authorities over the weekend. Jankovic is accused of encouraging his...

READ MORE ▸
News Legal objections to UK royal wedding dismissed
Legal objections to UK royal wedding dismissed
D. Wes Rist
March 8, 2005 11:37:00 am

UK Registrar-General Len Cook Tuesday dismissed 11 legal objections to the proposed civil marriage of Prince Charles and Camilla Parker Bowles that had been filed in their home towns of Chippenham and Cirencester. The Registrar-General...

READ MORE ▸
News Cleric appeals Bali bombing conviction
Cleric appeals Bali bombing conviction
D. Wes Rist
March 8, 2005 11:09:00 am

Radical Indonesian Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Ba'asyir appealed the sentence of the South Jakarta Court Tuesday, following his conviction on conspiracy charges last Thursday in connection with the 2002 Bali bombings. Wirawan Adnan, a member...

READ MORE ▸
  1. Newest
  2. Newer
  3. ...
  4. 26
  5. 27
  6. 28
  7. 29
  8. 30
  9. ...
  10. Older
  11. Oldest
Law students to join jurist
GET OUR DAILY DIGEST
LinkedIn YouTube Instagram Facebook RSS Twitter
Latest DISPATCHES
Dispatches

Dispatches

Peru dispatch: protesters demand new elections as death toll from political violence surges under newly sworn-in president

Peru dispatch: protesters demand new elections as death toll from political violence surges under newly sworn-in president

Latest COMMENTARY
comments 1

comments 1

by justia.admin
Post september 4

Post september 4

by Anonymous
Latest FEATURES
My features post

My features post

Features 4

Features 4

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).

Jurist
Home Attributions Disclaimer Privacy Policy Contact Us
Copyright © 2026, JURIST Legal News & Research Services, Inc.
JURISTnews is a collaboration with the University of Pittsburgh