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Office of International Law and Policy

Asst. Dean Lydia Lazar

Record Archives For Fall 2005
 

Stop the Genocide in Darfur: Bribe the Chinese

Posted November 14,2005: You have to give the Bush administration’ s deputy secretary of state Robert B. Zoellick credit: he certainly appears to be doing the best he can to stop the genocidal violence in Sudan’ s Darfur region. He has been to the area four times in six months and, as was reported this week, has met with the President of Sudan as well as with the warring rebel factions. He has been ‘ fact finding’ in the refugee camps, he has listened to the African Union’ s peacekeeping commanders describe what is happening and he has listened to what the government officials responsible for the region have had to say. Listening and fact finding are crucial elements of diplomatic intervention and Zoellick is by all accounts a skilled and honest negotiator and deal-maker. But the violence continues; men, women and children are being senselessly murdered everyday by the so-called “janjaweed,” Sudanese government sponsored militia on horseback, and no amount of political discourse appears likely to bring these rampaging cowboys (janjaweed means ‘ gun and horse’ ) to heel.


ATTENTION 2Ls – WANT TO WORK IN EUROPE NEXT SUMMER (2006) ???

Students who study at the University of Metz (France) this spring will be automatically matched with an internship in Europe. The spring semester at Metz starts Monday February 13, 2006 and ends on June 3, 2006. Internship lengths are negotiable and may include stipends and housing. The three courses (9 credits total) to be offered in English are Comparative Intellectual Property Law, European Union Law, and Comparative Constitutional Law. If you are interested please contact Dean Lazar immediately as the program will not be offered if there are not enough students signed up! llazar@kentlaw.edu room 320B 312-906-512


Why Study Law in the Heart of the Empire?

Posted October 17,2005: To some people, 'law' is a set of rules designed by the powerful to entrench their power, while for others it is a set of rules designed by an enlightened elite to create a level playing field where people can compete to the best of their ability to make money. Still others see the law as an evolving set of rules that reflect communal efforts to live together harmoniously. Finally, many view the law as morality codified, arguing that we criminalize behavior we determine to be ethically injurious to the society as a whole. Whatever your view of the law, and of course many believe it is some combination of the above explanations, if you decide to study the law of country other than your own you will enrich and expand your understanding of your own legal system and gain invaluable cross cultural experience that will help you no matter what you decide to do when you finally leave the student life and enter the working world.

Silver Lining in Iraq and Katrina Debacles?

Posted September 27,2005: Even as we uncover the full magnitude of the federal and local government failures in preparing for and responding to Katrina, we must keep our attention focused on the administration's rapid enlistment of private entities to solve problems not only in Louisiana but also in Iraq. As the New York Times and others are now reporting, the normal safeguards against price gouging on bids for government work are not working due to the exigency of the situation(s), the political opportunism of the Bush administration and its particular form of crony capitalism, and the unsurprisingly voracious appetite of private businesses to profit at the expense of the American taxpayer.

"How do you spell relief"

Posted September 05,2005: When disaster strikes, those who are affected do whatever they can to survive. Those who are not immediately affected have a choice – they can involve themselves in some way with the relief effort or they can go on with their lives. Here in the US, right now, a disaster has struck the communities around New Orleans, and as the nation responds with help of all sorts – from immediate search and rescue operations using both private and official boats, to organized bus caravans to take refugees from the compromised New Orleans Superdome to the Houston Astrodome, to the provision of emergency supplies – we see how critically interdependent we truly are, and, paradoxically, how fortunate.



Call for Debators: October Webcast Opportunity

Posted August 29,2005: Chicago-Kent has agreed to participate in a debate on the pros and cons of particular provisions of the Patriot Act. The debate will take place in mid-October and is to be webcast. The other debators will be from Loyola and John Marshall. The event is sponsored by the National Strategy Forum. Students interested in participating will be given academic and debating support by faculty. If this sounds like an opportunity that you are interested in, please contact Dean Lazar immediately so that we can put our team together!


In Search of Pro Americanism?

Posted August 22,2005: The press has lately been full of stories decrying the loss of good will that the United States has suffered around the world, and bemoaning the decline in "pro Americanism" since the high point immediately after September 11, 2001. Indeed, a recent poll conducted by the University of Maryland and an outside polling firm provides evidence that public opinion around the world is starting to assume a new, 21st century configuration that reflects an increase in respect and admiration for European and Chinese influence in global affairs and, presumably, a decrease in admiration of the United States.


Surprise: Bush Administration Joins Anti-Nafta Movement!

Posted August 15,2005: Last week, having lost its case at the Extraordinary Challenge Committee (an official tribunal established as part of Nafta's dispute resolution process), the Bush Administration slapped Canada in the face and appeared to abrogate its obligations under Nafta when it asserted that, after years of litigation over alleged Canadian subsidization of timber sales into the US, it now preferred a "negotiated solution" to the controversy. Understandably, the Canadians are upset, since the US has forced their timber exporters to pay $5 billion in extra import duties while the controversy has wound its way through the official Nafta dispute resolution mechanism of high level consultations, bi-national review panels and a presumably final appeal to the Extraordinary Challenge Committee.


 





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