Author Submission Deadlines for July 2008
Upcoming submission deadlines in July 2008 for journals, conferences, symposiums, and student writing competitions.
Read More →New Barriers for Native American Indian Youth
While other high school teens in the U.S. encounter Fourth Amendment lessons on what constitutes “unreasonable searches and seizures” of lockers and “invasions of privacy” from random drug tests, the 320 high school students at Chemawa Indian School in Salem, Oregon discovered an unexpected and unwelcome invasion on campus, a barbed-wire fence, courtesy of the […]
Read More →Scholarships for Lawyers: Study the Implications of Climatic Changes in the Arctic
The International Max Planck Research School for Maritime Affairs at the University of Hamburg will be awarding six Ph.D. scholarships for a two-year period beginning October 2008. Funded scholars will write a dissertation in German or English on the legal implications of climatic changes in the Arctic. Applicants must have a law degree or other […]
Read More →Authors for Asia Pacific Judicial Reform Handbook
The Asia Pacific Judicial Reform Forum (APJRF) is looking for authors to contribute to a Judicial Reform Handbook. The goal of the handbook is to provide pragmatic tools and resources in support of effective judicial reform in Asia-Pacific countries. It is intended for use by the judiciary and executive in each member country. The deadline […]
Read More →150th Anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court Case Dredd Scott
One hundred fifty years ago today, on March 6, 1857, the U.S. Supreme Court held in the Dredd Scott decision that slaves “imported into this country” were not U.S. citizens and thus could not claim the rights and privileges of citizenship, including access to justice through the courts. The decision denied Scott, as well all […]
Read More →DR Congo – Constitutional Referendum
More than forty years have elapsed since the Democratic Republic of Congo’s last democratic poll, which was held in 1960 upon gaining independence from Belgium, and the country’s constitutional referendum of 18-19 December 2005, in which 84% of the voters endorsed a new 229-article constitution (in French). The referendum represents a major turning point for […]
Read More →UN to Send Political Mission to Nepal
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan today authorized the creation of a special UN political mission in Nepal to advance reconciliation, support a transitional government, and assist with elections. The mission consists of a small group of multi-disciplinary civilian advisors led by Ian Martin, in his new role as special envoy. Martin returns on Monday […]
Read More →UN Peace Operation Needed in Nepal
In a significant breakthrough, Nepal’s government and the Maoist rebels today submitted a five-point letter to the United Nations requesting assistance with the ceasefire and the elections. The two sides specifically asked for a UN peace operation to monitor human rights, the ceasefire code of conduct, arms management of the rebels, the confinement of the […]
Read More →Maoist Shining Path Leader Abimael Guzmán Sentenced Again to Life
Fourteen years after a secret military tribunal sentenced Maoist Shining Path leader Abimael Guzmán to life imprisonment in October 1992, a Peruvian civil court on Friday handed down the same life sentence. Guzmán’s year-long retrial resulted from a 60-page ruling by the Peruvian Constitutional Court in 2003 that declared secret military tribunals unconstitutional and in […]
Read More →“State of Fear: The Truth About Terrorism” Film Screening
Attorneys and law students from three continents gathered in Washington, D.C. for the film screening of “State of Fear: The Truth About Terrorism,” the award-wining human rights documentary about Peru’s struggle with terrorism 1980-2000. The film traces the rise of the Maoist Shining Path guerilla movement (Sendero Luminoso) in the 1980s under the leadership of […]
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