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Series

Boston University School of Law

2005

International

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Unspeakably Cruel: Torture, Medical Ethics, And The Law, George J. Annas Jan 2005

Unspeakably Cruel: Torture, Medical Ethics, And The Law, George J. Annas

Faculty Scholarship

Torture is a particularly horrible crime, and any participation of physicians in torture has always been difficult to comprehend. As General Telford Taylor explained to the American judges at the trial of the Nazi doctors in Nuremberg, Germany (called the “Doctors' Trial”), “To kill, to maim, and to torture is criminal under all modern systems of law . . . yet these [physician] defendants, all of whom were fully able to comprehend the nature of their acts . . . are responsible for wholesale murder and unspeakably cruel tortures.” Taylor told the judges that it was the obligation of the …


Private Disputes And The Public Good: Explaining Arbitration Law, William W. Park Jan 2005

Private Disputes And The Public Good: Explaining Arbitration Law, William W. Park

Faculty Scholarship

At least two intersecting questions lurk in any study of international business arbitration. Each arises from the litigants' desire (at least when the contract was signed) for binding dispute resolution outside the framework of government-administered courts. Each brings analytic challenges that implicate cross-cultural conflicts.