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- Canada; United States; Indian Residential Schools; Indian Boarding Schools; missing children; National Day for Truth and Reconciliation; Orange Shirt Day; National Indigenous Peoples Day; sovereignty; International Criminal Court; United Nations; Catholic Church; International Human Rights (1)
- Guantánamo Bay; Detainees; Habeas Corpus; ICCPR; ECHR; National Defense Authorization Act; AUMF; United Kingdom; United States; Belmarsh Prison; Active Hostilities; Geneva Conventions; War in Afghanistan; International Human Rights; International Treaties; Executive Branch; Supreme Court; Indefinite Detention (1)
- Social and Cultural Rights; ICESCR; European Convention on Human Rights; ECHR; Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women-CEDAW-AKP (1)
- Turkey; Istanbul Convention; Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combatting Violence Against Women and Domestic Violence; Domestic violence; Domestic abuse; Sexual violence; Gender-based violence; Council of Europe; Recep Tayyip Erdoğan; President Erdoğan; Group of Experts on Action against Violence against Women; GREVIO; Human rights; Melek Ipek; Nahide Opuz; Gender stereotypes; Gender-based education; European Court of Human Rights; Women’s rights movement; International Covenant on Economic (1)
- WHO; UN; NATO; CCP; Wuhan; COVID-19; Quarantine; Sovereignty over Citizens; Law of Disease; disease diplomacy; soft power politics; realpolitik; microbialpolitik; IHR; Red Cross; Humanitarian Law; WHO failures on COVID-19; COVID-19 responses; COVID-19 damages; Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesys; Ebola response; Shi Zhengli; Pandemic X; CDC; R2P; Responsibility to Protect; UN Security Council; International Relations; UNESCO; enforcement mechanism; United States; China; PRC; Russia; trade law; trade relations; globalization (1)
Articles 1 - 4 of 4
Full-Text Articles in Law
The Sword, The Shield, And The Jab: How Nato Can Bypass The Un And World Health Organization To Help Control And Prevent Future Pandemics, Aaron Earlywine
The Sword, The Shield, And The Jab: How Nato Can Bypass The Un And World Health Organization To Help Control And Prevent Future Pandemics, Aaron Earlywine
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
An autopsy of the world’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic reveals many preexisting conditions that only exacerbated the crisis. Chief among them are the failures and obfuscations of the World Health Organization (WHO). The WHO is sick with corruption, incompetence, or at very least riddled with dysfunction. This is not the first time the WHO has proven itself unable to meet the demands of global health initiatives, let alone global health crises. Not only is this dysfunctional organization proving itself to be a money-consuming abscess, but hostile powers, namely China, have used it to covertly wield influence and shield themselves …
A Not-So Turkish Delight: The Implications Of Turkey’S Unprecedented Withdrawal From A Groundbreaking Women’S Rights Treaty And The Need For International Reform, Allyssa Myers
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
Domestic violence against women is one of the most pervasive and pressing international issues of our time. There have been multiple international human rights treaties enacted to address this issue and move to end gender-based violence—the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combatting Violence Against Women and Domestic Violence (Istanbul Convention) being one. Created in 2011, the Istanbul Convention sought to provide an international legal framework for how states should work toward eradicating gender-based violence. Turkey, the first country to sign and to subsequently ratify the Istanbul Convention, unprecedently withdrew from the Convention in 2021. Turkish President Recep Tayyip …
A Genocide The World Has Ignored: Holding Governments And The Catholic Church Accountable For Residential And Boarding Schools Through The Icc, K. R. Redhage
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
The United States, Canada, and the Catholic Church committed genocide in an effort to control Indigenous people and steal their land. By various means, over the course of hundreds of years, these extant powers perpetrated this genocide, and the effects continue to be felt in Indigenous communities to this day. The residential and boarding school systems, which were only disbanded in the 1980s, are two examples of tools created by these governments and the Catholic Church, which led to tens of thousands of deaths of indigenous children and robbed many more of their families, culture, language, and traditions. This article …
Indefinite Detention At Guantánamo: How The National Defense Authorization Act Results In Indefinite Detention In Violation Of International Human Rights, Molly Turro
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
The majority of the remaining detainees at Guantánamo Bay have been cleared for transfer to other countries. Provisions of the National Defense Authorization Act that prohibit government funds to be used for transfer and reinforce the United States government’s authority to detain enemy combatants until the end of active hostilities have left these detainees waiting in limbo to be transferred elsewhere. The following piece argues that the resulting indefinite detention that these Guantánamo detainees face is both a violation of international human rights and an unnecessary financial burden on the US government. This Note compares the approach taken by the …