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Saddam Hussein Dujail appellate chamber decision [IHT] News
Saddam Hussein Dujail appellate chamber decision [IHT]
January 4, 2007 11:50:00 am

Number 29/c/2006, Iraqi High Tribunal, December 26, 2006, as translated into English and made available January 3, 2007. Read the full text of the judgment translated into English via Grotian Moment, the Saddam Hussein trial blog at Case Western Law School.

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UK dispatch: Court of Appeal upholds ban on Palestine Action advocacy group

UK dispatch: Court of Appeal upholds ban on Palestine Action advocacy group

Ghana dispatch: parliament passes anti-LGBTQ+ bill, awaits presidential approval

Ghana dispatch: parliament passes anti-LGBTQ+ bill, awaits presidential approval

Latest COMMENTARY
Who Gets to Belong? Indonesia’s Minority Faiths and the Limits of Legal Protection

Who Gets to Belong? Indonesia’s Minority Faiths and the Limits of Legal Protection

by Professor Laras Susanti | Universitas Gadjah Mada
The Hermeneutics of Collapse: When Legal Form Outlives Shared Meaning

The Hermeneutics of Collapse: When Legal Form Outlives Shared Meaning

by AmirAli Maleki
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Disenfranchisement as punishment: Ghana weighs democratic order against an inalienable vote

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The Legal Architecture of Reparations: A Conversation with Kwesi Pratt Jnr.

THIS DAY @ LAW

US Supreme Court ruled flag-burning protected by First Amendment

On June 21, 1989, the US Supreme Court ruled that burning the American flag in public to protest government policies is a right protected by the First Amendment. Read Texas v. Johnson. Learn more about the legal aspects of flag desecration from the Free Speech Center.

Founding of Halifax, Nova Scotia sparks Indigenous resistance

On June 21, 1749, British colonists founded the town of Halifax in the province of Nova Scotia. General Edward Cornwallis's founding of the city sparked resistance from the local Indigenous Mi'kmaq and some French-speaking Acadians in the area. French Catholic Priest Jean-Louis Le Loutre organized Mi'kmaq attacks on the British, which would continue through the French and Indian War. The Mi'kmaq would later sign a series of peace treaties with the British known as the Peace and Friendship Treaties, and the Acadians would be deported from Nova Scotia in 1755. Learn more about Fr. Le Loutre and the history of Halifax.

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