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Keynote Remarks: Re-Tooling Law And Legal Education For Food System Reform: Food Law And Policy In Practice, Emily M. Broad Leib
Keynote Remarks: Re-Tooling Law And Legal Education For Food System Reform: Food Law And Policy In Practice, Emily M. Broad Leib
Seattle University Law Review
Thank you for the opportunity to be with you today and to take part in this symposium on the important role law schools and lawyers can play in changing our food system. Food preferences and food choices are incredibly personal, but the way we produce and consume food, and its impacts on our environment, public health, and the safety of ourselves and others, make it a pressing societal issue as well.
Thinking/Practicing Clinical Legal Education From Within The Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: Lessons From The Al-Quds Human Rights Clinic, David F. Chavkin
Thinking/Practicing Clinical Legal Education From Within The Palestinian-Israeli Conflict: Lessons From The Al-Quds Human Rights Clinic, David F. Chavkin
Human Rights Brief
No abstract provided.
Project Reveals Challenges And Recommendations For Teaching International Humanitarian Law In U.S. Law Schools, Hadar Harris, Solomon Shinerock
Project Reveals Challenges And Recommendations For Teaching International Humanitarian Law In U.S. Law Schools, Hadar Harris, Solomon Shinerock
Human Rights Brief
No abstract provided.
Global Legal Education And Human Rights, Claudio Grossman
Global Legal Education And Human Rights, Claudio Grossman
Human Rights Brief
No abstract provided.
Promoting Human Rights Education In The Americas , Natasha Parassram Concepcion
Promoting Human Rights Education In The Americas , Natasha Parassram Concepcion
Human Rights Brief
No abstract provided.
The Teaching Of International Human Rights In U.S. Law Schools, Richard B. Lillich
The Teaching Of International Human Rights In U.S. Law Schools, Richard B. Lillich
Antioch Law Journal
The teaching of international human rights law in U.S. law schools has come a long way in the past two decades. Twenty years ago a survey conducted by the American Society of International Law made no mention of the subject. I In 1965, the late Egon Schwelb, "Mr. Human Rights," in what he himself characterized as a "novel departure,"2 offered a seminar on "The International Protection of Human Rights" at Yale. During the next half-dozen years, similar offerings were made available at California (Berkeley), Harvard, Virginia, and several other institutions. By 1971, when a panel at the annual meeting of …
The Impact Of Crowd Psychology Upon International Law, Harold D. Lasswell
The Impact Of Crowd Psychology Upon International Law, Harold D. Lasswell
William & Mary Law Review
No abstract provided.