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Kenneth Lasson

Human Rights Law

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Full-Text Articles in Law

Antisemitism In The Academic Voice: Confronting Bigotry While Protecting Free Speech, Kenneth Lasson Apr 2011

Antisemitism In The Academic Voice: Confronting Bigotry While Protecting Free Speech, Kenneth Lasson

Kenneth Lasson

ANTISEMITISM IN THE ACADEMIC VOICE Confronting Bigotry While Protecting Free Speech By Kenneth Lasson * Abstract Among the abuses of the academic enterprise that have been taking place in American universities over the past several decades, and continue to this day, are failures of intellectual rigor: the abandonment of reliance on facts, common sense, and logic in the pursuit of narrow political agendas – which all too often presented in the academic voice. Students today increasingly find themselves confronted by curricula manipulated by scholarly extremists. While the number of overt antisemitic incidents has declined markedly in the United States over …


Bloodstains On A "Code Of Honor", Kenneth Lasson Aug 2008

Bloodstains On A "Code Of Honor", Kenneth Lasson

Kenneth Lasson

Abstract In the real world of the Twenty-first Century, deep biases against women are prevalent in much of Muslim society. Although there is no explicit approval of honor killing in Islamic law (Sharia), its culture remains fundamentally patriarchal. As unfathomable as it is to Western minds, “honor killing” is a facet of traditional patriarchy, and its condonation can be traced largely to ancient tribal practices. Justifications for it can be found in the codes of Hammurabi and in the family law of the Roman Empire. Unfortunately, honor killings in the Twenty-first Century are not isolated incidents, nor can they be …


Defending Truth: Legal And Psychological Aspects Of Holocaust Denial, Kenneth Lasson Aug 2007

Defending Truth: Legal And Psychological Aspects Of Holocaust Denial, Kenneth Lasson

Kenneth Lasson

Today that form of historical revisionism popularly called “Holocaust denial” abounds worldwide in all its full foul flourish – disseminated not only on Arab streets but in American university newspapers, not only in books, articles, and speeches but in mosques and over the Internet. Can we reject spurious revisionism, or punish purposeful expressions of hatred, and still pay homage to the liberty of thought ennobled by the First Amendment? Are some conflicts between freedom of expression and civility as insoluble as they are inevitable? Can history ever be proven as Truth? This article attempts to answer those questions. Part I …