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News Senate passes copyright reform bill
Senate passes copyright reform bill
Matt Lubniewski
November 22, 2004 12:34:00 pm

The US Senate has passed a bill increasing penalties for certain violations of copyright. The provisions, included in legislation approved, Saturday set up to three years in prison for those who videotape movies while in the theater, and stiff...

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News Report on civil rights enforcement by the Bush administration [TRAC]
Report on civil rights enforcement by the Bush administration [TRAC]
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
November 22, 2004 11:54:00 am

Civil Rights Enforcement by the Bush Administration, Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, Syracuse University, released November 21, 2004 . Read the text of the report here. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase...

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News Appeal begins in Afghan court for US men convicted of running illegal prison
Appeal begins in Afghan court for US men convicted of running illegal prison
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 11:41:00 am

An Afghan court held a preliminary appeal hearing Monday in the case of three Americans who were convicted for illegally detaining and torturing eight Afghans, including a supreme court judge, in a an illegal prison. The defendants will argue...

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News Supporters, opponents of foreign-born US presidents take debate to the web
Supporters, opponents of foreign-born US presidents take debate to the web
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 11:24:00 am

Advocates for a constitutional amendment allowing foreign-born citizens to run for President who recently launched television ads promoting the idea (previously reported on JURIST's Paper Chase) are now pressing their case online. Amend for Arnold, inspired by California governor...

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News International brief ~ OSCE says Ukrainian run-off election falls short of international standards; opposition claims fraud
International brief ~ OSCE says Ukrainian run-off election falls short of international standards; opposition claims fraud
D. Wes Rist
November 22, 2004 11:04:00 am

Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych is officially in the lead after Sunday's run-off presidential election in Ukraine, but opposition candidate Viktor Yushchenko, supported by outgoing President Leonid Kuchma, has alleged massive fraud in vote counting and voter turnout in heavily...

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News Swedish courts not referring enough cases to European court, Commission says
Swedish courts not referring enough cases to European court, Commission says
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 11:02:00 am

The European Commission is threatening to censure Sweden for failing to refer enough cases to the European Court of Justice. The Commission says that Sweden is breaking its EU treaty obligations by referring only three cases to the ECJ...

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News Enforcement of civil rights law declines during Bush years, study says
Enforcement of civil rights law declines during Bush years, study says
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 10:43:00 am

Federal enforcement of civil rights laws declined sharply during the Bush administration, according to a new study released by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse, a non-partisan research center housed at Syracuse University. According to the TRAC report, federal prosecutors...

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News UK considering tough changes to anti-terror laws
UK considering tough changes to anti-terror laws
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 10:20:00 am

Britain is considering a host of new anti-terrorism measures including the introduction of special courts to try terror suspects without a jury, according to an interview given by Home Secretary David Blunkett. Other measures being considered include allowing evidence...

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News Washington Post opposes nomination of Gonzales as Attorney General
Washington Post opposes nomination of Gonzales as Attorney General
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 09:56:00 am

In a Monday editorial, the Washington Post opposes the nomination of Alberto Gonzales as Attorney General, citing Gonzales' role in a February 2002 presidential memorandum that concluded that the Geneva Conventions should be set aside for "unlawful combatants." Gonzales...

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News Bloody Sunday inquiry enters final phase
Bloody Sunday inquiry enters final phase
Jeannie Shawl
November 22, 2004 09:35:00 am

The longest and most expensive public investigation in British legal history entered its final phase Monday with lawyer Christopher Clarke beginning a two-day closing speech intended to provide an overview of the evidence heard by the Bloody Sunday Inquiry....

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Latest DISPATCHES
US dispatch: federal grand jury subpoena marks first known criminal probe into gender-affirming care at major New York hospital

US dispatch: federal grand jury subpoena marks first known criminal probe into gender-affirming care at major New York hospital

India dispatch: Supreme Court rebukes lower courts for branding a woman’s  career choices as cruelty, raising questions about how matrimonial law treats  working women

India dispatch: Supreme Court rebukes lower courts for branding a woman’s career choices as cruelty, raising questions about how matrimonial law treats working women

Latest COMMENTARY
From Tokyo to The Hague: How a 1946 Tribunal Continues to Shape the Laws of War

From Tokyo to The Hague: How a 1946 Tribunal Continues to Shape the Laws of War

by David M. Crane | Founding Chief Prosecutor of the UN Special Court for Sierra Leone
The President’s Immunity Is Only as Strong as His Legal Authority

The President’s Immunity Is Only as Strong as His Legal Authority

by Katherine P. Wu | Stanford Law School
Latest FEATURES
Beaten, Starved, Unbroken: An Interview with Ben Marmarelli, Lawyer to Marwan Barghouti, Palestine’s Nelson Mandela

Beaten, Starved, Unbroken: An Interview with Ben Marmarelli, Lawyer to Marwan Barghouti, Palestine’s Nelson Mandela

Blanche v. Lau: Supreme Court to Decide Whether DHS Can Sidestep Deportation Rules for Returning Green Card Holders

Blanche v. Lau: Supreme Court to Decide Whether DHS Can Sidestep Deportation Rules for Returning Green Card Holders

THIS DAY @ LAW

UK parliament rejected J.S. Mill's proposal to give women the vote

On May 20, 1867, the British Parliament rejected by 196-73 an amendment to the 1867 Reform Act presented by John Stuart Mill that would have permitted women to vote. Review Mill's 1869 work The Subjection of Women.

Supreme Court applies Free Exercise Clause to state governments

On May 20, 1940, the United States Supreme Court held that the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment applied to state governments in Cantwell v. Connecticut under the incorporation doctrine, which applied the protections of the Bill of Rights to state governments through the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. Learn more about the Incorporation Doctrine from the Cornell Law Schools' Legal Information Institute.

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