Quotas for Electing Women: Path to Empowerment or Peril? Part 2
Part II continues the discussion on whether legally mandated quotas should be used as affirmative mechanisms to increase women’s political representation in national legislatures. The discussion explores the advantages of legally mandated quotas systems used in 46 countries, the perils of quotas, and whether quota systems could be considered discriminatory under international human rights law.
Read More →Georgetown Law Graduation 2008
Oyez, oyez, oyez . . . Over the course of the past three years, learned professors at Georgetown University Law Center have continued the time-honored tradition of prying answers to practical problems, theoretical issues, and increasingly bizarre scenarios from the scrappy crew of students — including me — seated far beneath them in lecture halls. […]
Read More →International Law Submission Deadlines: October 2008
Upcoming submission deadlines in October 2008 for journals, conferences, symposiums, and student moot competitions.
Read More →Criminal Justice Degrees Guide – Top 100 Law Blogs
I want to thank the Criminal Justice Degrees Guide for recognizing InsideJustice.com as one of the Top 100 law and lawyer blogs. On CriminalJusticeDegreesGuide.com, you can search for legal and paralegal educational programs in the United States. The guide allows you to narrow your search to online or on campus programs, to view the results […]
Read More →The Four Gaps: Challenges to UN Peacekeeping Operations
Søren Jessen-Petersen, the former Head of the UN Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK 2004-2006), spoke in Washington, D.C. this summer on challenges faced by UN missions. Currently, the UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations (DPKO) oversees 18 peacekeeping missions, employs more than 110,000 troops, and manages a budget of $7.2 billion, up from $2.7 billion in 2001, […]
Read More →63rd Session of the UN General Assembly – Democratization, Legal Reforms, and International Courts
In his opening remarks before the 63rd session of the United Nations General Assembly, incoming President Miguel D’Escoto Brockmann of Nicaragua called for democratization of the United Nations, reform of the 15-member Security Council, and adoption of an ambitious 160-item agenda. All but eleven of the items have been discussed previously. High on his list […]
Read More →Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples: 1st Anniversary
In two significant developments since the UN General Assembly adopted the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples on September 13, 2007, two of the four states opposed to its adoption have taken significant political action in recognition of indigenous communities and in support of the Declaration. In Australia, Prime Minister Kevin Rudd issued an […]
Read More →Executing MedellÃn: The International Confrontation of Fair Legal Treatment of Foreign Nationals Abroad
According to Texas authorities, Mexican national José Ernesto MedellÃn Rojas has exhausted all available legal remedies and will be executed by lethal injection after 6 p.m. on Tuesday, August 5, 2008 for his role in two murders fifteen years ago. His planned execution brazenly defies the July 16, 2008 order by the International Court of […]
Read More →Call for Nominations: Human Rights Defenders Award
Nominations are being accepted for a 2008 Human Rights Defenders award with a deadline of August 31, 2008. Nominees must be individuals, not organizations, who promote and protect human rights and who have faced, are currently facing, or are at risk of facing negative consequences as a result of their work. Award recipients will receive […]
Read More →Suspending The Constitution for Terrorists
Should alleged terrorists be given a fair trial and a reasonable opportunity to confront witnesses and challenge evidence against them? If so, should they be compensated with reduced sentences if the government violates international law in their prosecution and detainment? Attorney Andrew Cohen reported today for CBS News that the U.S. Supreme Court conferred Friday […]
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