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- And Cultural Rights; Helsinki Act; American Convention on Human Rights 1969; Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union; European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms; United Nations Human Rights Committee; European Court of Human Rights; Freedom of Opinion; Media; The 1993 Vienna World Conference on Human Rights; Bangkok Declaration; San Jose Declaration; Tunis Declaration; U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom; Universalism; Absolutism; U.N. General Assembly; Cultural relativism; (1)
- Brexit; European Union (EU); Article 50; Lisbon Treaty; United Kingdom; Intellectual Property; European Free Trade Association (EFTA); European Economic Area (EEA); World Trade Organization (WTO); EU Member States; Donald Tusk; Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property; EU law; World Trade Organization's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS Agreement); Multilateral agreements; Free trade agreemnt (FTA); TRIPS Plus; Jurisdiction; Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU); The Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU); Harmonization; European Union Intellectual Property Office (EUIPO); European Court of Justice (ECJ); Supreme Court of the United Kingdom; Trademarks; Registered Community Designs; European Patent Office (EPO); European Patent Convention (EPC); Unitary Patents; British law; General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT); European Council; European Commission (1)
- Charlie Hebdo; Islam; Islamophobia; Terrorism; Freedom of expression; International human rights law; United Nations; France; Fundamentalism; Political satire; Je suis Charlie; I am Charlie; Universal Declaration of Human Rights; The Charter of the United Nations; United Nations; International Convenant on Civil and Political Rights; Intertnational Covenant on Economic (1)
- Israeli Open University; Israel; Palestine; Indigenous child removal; United States; Canada; Australia; Native Americans; Paelstinian authorities; Indigenous People; Chidl removal; Generational segregation; Incarceration; National security; Security Offenders; Israeli Supreme Court; Terra nullius; Child welfare; Children's rights; Zionism; Settler colonialism; Aboriginals; Child law and policy; Colonialism; (1)
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Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in International Law
Restructuring Intellectual Property Jurisdictions Post-Brexit: Strategic Considerations For The Eu And Britain, Alexandra George
Restructuring Intellectual Property Jurisdictions Post-Brexit: Strategic Considerations For The Eu And Britain, Alexandra George
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
Britain’s decision to “Brexit” from the European Union has caused great uncertainty and justified concern with respect to intellectual property laws and investments. Post-Brexit arrangements between the European Union and Britain have not yet been determined, and it is unclear whether these will be settled with respect to intellectual property law before Brexit is due to take effect in 2019. With intellectual property intensive industries accounting for 88 percent of EU imports and 90 percent of EU exports, British-EU intellectual property arrangements are the subject of intense interest worldwide as intellectual property owners and users speculate as to the likely …
Ties Of Separation: Analogy And Generational Segregation In North America, Australia, And Israel/Palestine, Hedi Viterbo
Ties Of Separation: Analogy And Generational Segregation In North America, Australia, And Israel/Palestine, Hedi Viterbo
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
This article takes analogy as both its mode and object of inquiry, to canvas the relationship between historical-geographical analogies and generational segregation (the large-scale separation of children and adults) from three complementary perspectives. First, due to restrictions recently introduced by the Israeli authorities, Palestinian prisoners have been prevented from reading popular study materials dealing with both Indigenous child removal and analogies concerning settler-indigenous relations in North America and Australia. This article revives the critical potential of this encounter with analogies and accounts by asserting an analogy between the removal of indigenous children to boarding schools in the United States and …
When Does Cultural Satire Cross The Line In The Global Human Rights Regime?: The Charlie Hebdo Controversy And Its Implication For Creating A New Paradigm To Assess The Bounds Of Freedom Of Expression, Kwanghyuk Yoo
Brooklyn Journal of International Law
Social justice does not exist in a vacuum. Social justice deters human rights policies from crossing the line. Thus, the principle of justice counterbalances the evils of the laissez-faire human rights philosophy when society lacks an appropriate form of legal or regulatory framework for legitimate restraints on human rights. Moreover, well-ordered just society does not allow human rights to be abused or curtailed beyond the level necessary to safeguard superior social norms or national interests. As such, human rights are subject to relative protection while they receive universal respect across the world. From a semantic standpoint, two ambivalent natures of …