LEX LATA, LEX FERENDA
The law as it is, the law as it should be
A commentary on International and Comparative Law and Global Affairs by Washington University School of Law Professors, Alumni, and Students
Postings By Date
Observations at the Ghana’s High Court in Accra
By: Jim Ransdell Jim Ransdell, 2L, interned at Legal Resources Centre in Accra, Ghana during the Summer of 2014 as part of Washington University School of Law’s Global Public Interest Law Internships. This is the second in a series of posts by Jim where he shares his...
read moreGlobal Perspectives on Colorism: Stepping Towards a Solution!
By: Neha Mishra, M.S. Ramaiah College of Law The two day Colorism Conference, hosted jointly by Washington University School of Law and Harris World Law Institute, established beyond a reasonable doubt that the problem of skin colour prejudice is prevalent all across...
read moreEducation is Somalia’s Key to Success
By: Abadir Barre Abadir Barre, 2L, worked at Puntland Legal Aid Center (PLAC) in northern Somali during the summer of 2014 as part of Washington University School of Law’s Global Public Interest Law Fellows Internship Program. This summer he will be working at the...
read moreBeginning the Dialogue: Global Perspectives on Colorism
By: Vinay Harpalani, Savannah Law School On April 2 and 3, 2015, I had the privilege of presenting at the Global Perspectives on Colorism conference, sponsored by Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute at Washington University in St. Louis School of Law. While there...
read moreUnited Nations Association of the United States Members’ Day Meeting
By: Marla Borkson I had the opportunity to attend the United Nations Association of the United States of America (UNA-USA) Members’ Day at the United Nations Headquarters in New York this past February. UNA-USA is one of sixteen branches under the Better World...
read moreProsecutor Serge Brammertz Lectures: “International Justice: Beginning of the End or End of the Beginning?”
By: Isaac Amon Chief Prosecutor Serge Brammertz of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) recently delivered a lecture at Washington University School of Law, International Justice: Beginning of the End or End of the Beginning? He...
read moreProf. Norwood’s Book Explores Boundaries of Colorism
For Kimberly Jade Norwood, Washington University professor of law and African & African American studies, the topic of her newly released book, Color Matters: Skin Tone Bias and the Myth of a Postracial America (Routledge, 2013), strikes close...
read moreComments on Preliminary Draft 3, Restatement of the Law Fourth: The Foreign Relations Law of the United States: Treaties
By: Leila Nadya Sadat In 2012, the American Law Institute (ALI) was approached by Professors Paul Stephan and Sarah Cleveland to do a new Restatement Fourth of the Foreign Relations Law of the United States. Their proposal posited that, with the end of the Cold War...
read moreObservations on Ghana’s legal education & paralegal training systems
By: Jim Ransdell Jim Ransdell, 2L, interned at Legal Resources Centre in Accra, Ghana during the Summer of 2014 as part of Washington University School of Law’s Global Public Interest Law Fellows Internship Program. This is the first in a series of posts by Jim...
read moreU.S. to Deport 150 Bosnians Believed to Have Participated in War Crimes and Ethnic Cleansing
By: Madaline George Last week, U.S. immigration officials announced plans to deport 150 Bosnians Serbs whom they believe took part in war crimes and ethnic cleansing during the conflict in the former Yugoslavia; a total of 300 people are suspected of having...
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