by Harris Institute | Jun 11, 2020 | Gun Violence, Human Rights
By: Odis Johnson Jr., Professor of Sociology and Education; Director of the Institute in Critical Quantitative, Computational, & Mixed Methodologies; Associate Director of the Center for the Study of Race, Ethnicity & Equity, Washington University in St....
by Harris Institute | Jun 9, 2020 | Foreign Affairs, Gun Violence, Human Rights
By: Poli Rijos, Center Manager, Center for Community Health Partnership & Research; Gun Violence Initiative, Institute for Public Health This blog is part of a special series by the Harris Institute’s Gun Violence and Human Rights Initiative and...
by Harris Institute | Jun 5, 2020 | Gun Violence, Human Rights
By: The Rev. Marc D. Smith, Ph.D., Bishop’s Deputy for Gun Violence Prevention, Episcopal Diocese of Missouri; Priest Associate, Episcopal Church of the Holy Communion, University City This blog is part of a special series by the Harris Institute’s Gun Violence...
by Harris Institute | Jun 5, 2020 | Gun Violence, Human Rights, Public Health
By: Thomas Gabor, formerly a Professor of Criminology, is the author of Confronting Gun Violence in America (2016) and Enough! Solving America’s Gun Violence Crisis (2019). This blog is part of a special series by the Harris Institute’s Gun Violence and...
by Harris Institute | May 5, 2020 | Commercial Law, Foreign Affairs, Human Rights, International Law, Public Health, United Nations
By: Ke Xu, LLM 2020 The Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute recently launched a new webinar series on COVID19 and International law in response to a call from students and the broader community for reliable and informative programming on an evolving global issue....
by Harris Institute | Apr 30, 2020 | Gun Violence, Human Rights, Public Health, United Nations
By Madaline M. George, J.D., Fellow, Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute, Washington University in St. Louis School of Law A joint report on gun violence by Washington University’s Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute and the Institute for Public Health has been...