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No Need for the CRPD?: Disability, Reproductive Autonomy, and Legal Capacity in the United States

No Need for the CRPD?: Disability, Reproductive Autonomy, and Legal Capacity in the United States

by Elizabeth Schroeder | Oct 24, 2022 | All, Disability, Healthcare, Human Rights, Women

A note on language: I use both ‘identify-first’ (disabled person) and ‘people-first’ (person with a disability) language throughout this article because English-speaking disability advocates use (and request that other people use) one or both of these. People with...

Rules For Peace And War In Outer Space

by Amanda Bini | Oct 23, 2022 | Discovery, Environment, History, Law of War, Private Space Flight, Public International Law, Space Law, United Nations

    Images from NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope have renewed worldwide interest in space exploration. In addition to the infinite possibilities that exist in outer space, there are several possibilities that hit closer to home. In the words of the U.S....
Broad Language, Uneven Enforcement: Why the Foreign Agents Registration Act Needs to be Reformed

Broad Language, Uneven Enforcement: Why the Foreign Agents Registration Act Needs to be Reformed

by Esteban Munoz Calle | Oct 22, 2022 | All, Democracy, North America, U.S. Foreign Policy

In 1938, President Roosevelt signed the Foreign Agents Registration Act (“FARA” or “the Act) in order to “expose foreign influence in American politics, with a specific focus on identifying and making a public record of attempts to spread propaganda and foreign...
Women’s Land Rights: A Powerful Tool for Development

Women’s Land Rights: A Powerful Tool for Development

by Elizabeth Duncan | Oct 12, 2022 | Africa, All, Environment, Human Rights, Women

Image Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Woman_watering_crops,_Tanzania.jpg https://www.usaid.gov/tanzania/our-work    Land is often the most important asset for households and individuals in the developing world, the majority of whom rely on...
Breaking Barriers: Iranian Women Fight For Their Rights In Recent Protests

Breaking Barriers: Iranian Women Fight For Their Rights In Recent Protests

by Andrea Lorch | Oct 10, 2022 | All, CEDAW, Comparative Law, Human Rights, Iran, Protests, Women

Over the last three weeks, protests have erupted across Iran in response to the death of Mahsa (Jina) Amini. Mahsa (Jina) Amini was a 22-year-old woman from Kurdistan who was arrested by the morality police, a special sect of law enforcement, in Tehran for “immodest...
International Derivatives Contracts in 2022

International Derivatives Contracts in 2022

by Evan Conner | Oct 7, 2022 | All, Cybersecurity, Elections, Europe, Internet Law, Trade, United Kingdom

The international financial system is by no means unified. Currencies, securities, assets, cryptos, and commodities have no centralized exchange and no single regulator. Instead, the institutions of modern international finance are knit together with derivatives:...
The ICJ’s Ability to Hold Russia Accountable for Invading Ukraine

The ICJ’s Ability to Hold Russia Accountable for Invading Ukraine

by Meredith Gusky | Oct 3, 2022 | All, Russia, Ukraine

On March 16, 2022 the International Court of Justice (ICJ) ordered Russia to immediately suspend military operations in Ukraine. This order raises two very important questions for international law and policy: First, what authority does the ICJ have in ordering a...
Managing Your Own Identity:  The European Union’s Upcoming Biometric Passport

Managing Your Own Identity: The European Union’s Upcoming Biometric Passport

by Vivian Overbeck | May 19, 2022 | All, European Union

The European Union is in the process of creating the European Digital Identity: a biometric passport, or a central location for all identifying information.  The purpose behind the passport is to enable Europeans to easily identify themselves and share selected...
The Child’s Right Act vs. Sharia Law: Girl-child Marriage In Nigeria

The Child’s Right Act vs. Sharia Law: Girl-child Marriage In Nigeria

by Gabriella Igboko | May 3, 2022 | Africa, All, Children, Nigeria, Sharia Law, Women

Child marriage is a human rights violation with many facets and consequences; it is a practice that disproportionately affects girls, stripping them of their agency to make decisions, inhibiting their education, and exposing them to violence and abuse. Countries have...
Antitrust Regulations and Their Impacts on International Relations and Law

Antitrust Regulations and Their Impacts on International Relations and Law

by Hyung-jo Choi | May 2, 2022 | All, Financial, Trade

In early March of 2020, a South Korean national who worked for German automotive company, Continental, was extradited to the United States. He pleaded guilty for his involvement in an  international market allocation and bid-rigging conspiracy involving the sale of...
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