International Law Blog Postings

Archives for: January 2009, 16

Inaugural Countdown: Legal Challenge to Inaugural Oath and Prayer

Permalink 16 January 09    Inside Justice ®   Renee Dopplick    Tags: United States    
Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton dismissed a constitutional challenge to the inclusion of religious references and prayer at Tuesday's inaugural ceremony on the basis that the plaintiffs failed to show "concrete and immediate" harm. Thus, he concluded that the plaintiffs lacked standing to request extraordinary injunctive relief. At issue in Newdow v. Roberts was whether the U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice can administer the oath of office with the additional words "so help me God" and whether clergy can deliver an invocation and benediction with references to God. Although the court rejected the request for a preliminary injunction against the Chief Justice and the inaugural organizers, the court did not rule on a motion to dismiss. More

Call for Papers: Environmental Ethics, Sustainability and Education

Permalink 16 January 09    Inside Justice ®   Renee Dopplick    Tags: Professional, Call for Papers    
The 8th Global Conference on Environmental Justice and Global Citizenship is looking for papers that investigate and explicitly explore environmental ethics and sustainability. Abstracts are due by 6 February 2009. More


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Return of the State
This article is the extended address by José E. Alvarez, the Herbert and Rose Rubin Professor of International Law at New York University School of Law, at the University of Minnesota Law School's conference on "International Economic Law in a Time of Change." Alvarez relects upon and rebuts a collection of papers on supra-nationalism presented at the conference. He argues that states, as sovereign entities, are making a comeback. The full-text is available online for free.

Whither Justice? Uganda and Five Years of the International Criminal Court Michael Drexler argues that the International Criminal Court is pursuing an inappropriate engagement strategy in Uganda by ignoring the impacts of criminal prosecution and investigation on the prospects for peace to the country's decades-long conflict. It is published by the peer-reviewed Interdisciplinary Journal of Human Rights Law (IJHRL) and is available online for free.

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