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International Law

Brigham Young University Law School

Journal

2021

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Law

A Symbol Of Unity: Freeing The Aboriginal Flag, Dominic Shaw Dec 2021

A Symbol Of Unity: Freeing The Aboriginal Flag, Dominic Shaw

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Christian Accounts Of Religious Liberty: Two Views Of Conscience, Joel Harrison Jun 2021

Christian Accounts Of Religious Liberty: Two Views Of Conscience, Joel Harrison

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Catholicism, Liberalism, And Populism, Andrea Pin, Luca P. Vanoni Jun 2021

Catholicism, Liberalism, And Populism, Andrea Pin, Luca P. Vanoni

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Human Dignity Has No Borders: Respecting The Rights Of “People On The Move” And The Rights And Religious Freedom Of Those Who Aid Them, Christine M. Venter Jun 2021

Human Dignity Has No Borders: Respecting The Rights Of “People On The Move” And The Rights And Religious Freedom Of Those Who Aid Them, Christine M. Venter

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


What Does The State Owe To Its People? Toward A “Responsibility To Develop”, Amit Khardori Apr 2021

What Does The State Owe To Its People? Toward A “Responsibility To Develop”, Amit Khardori

BYU Law Review

No abstract provided.


Death Star Drones: How Missile Defense Drone Technology Marks The Advent Of Contingent Sovereignty, Ben Forsgren Mar 2021

Death Star Drones: How Missile Defense Drone Technology Marks The Advent Of Contingent Sovereignty, Ben Forsgren

BYU Law Review

Are advances in national security worth pursuing at the expense of sovereign equality? A new U.S. drone program may soon force the world to decide. Thanks to recent technological advances in unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV) and directed energy weapons, the United States will soon have a fleet of missile defense UAVs outfitted with advanced laser weapons designed to destroy intercontinental ballistic missiles before the missiles complete their launch phase. While these drones would significantly decrease the threat of a nuclear attack against the United States, they can only function if they are preemptively stationed in the sovereign airspace of other …