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Europe's Role in US Renditions [Amnesty International] News
Europe's Role in US Renditions [Amnesty International]
Bernard Hibbitts | JURIST Staff
June 14, 2006 06:24:00 pm

Partners in crime: Europe's role in US renditions, Amnesty International, June 14, 2006 [report accusing European states of being "partners in crime" with the United States in the alleged circuit of CIA rendition flights transporting terror suspects to third countries known to use torture]. Read the full text of the report [PDF] Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

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Kenya dispatch: High Court strikes down law criminalizing consensual sex among teenagers

Kenya dispatch: High Court strikes down law criminalizing consensual sex among teenagers

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

THIS DAY @ LAW

Gandhi commits his first act of civil disobedience

On June 7, 1893, Mohandas Gandhi committed his first act of civil disobedience in South Africa. Because he was an Indian, Gandhi was ordered to move to the third class section of a train, despite holding a first-class ticket. When he refused, Gandhi was thrown off of the train. Gandhi would go on to organize efforts by Indians living in South Africa to oppose racial discrimination thereby founding the Natal Indian Congress. He would then return to his native India to lead its drive for independence from Great Britain. Learn more about the Natal Indian Congress from the South African History Archive.

US Supreme Court ruled contraceptive use protected by privacy right

On June 7, 1965, in Griswold v. Connecticut, the US Supreme Court held that the use of contraceptives was protected by the constitutional right of privacy.

Learn more about the impact of this case from the Planned Parenthood Federation of America.

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