Human rights are a serious matter. Unfortunately, in spite of half a century of improving the civil rights of individuals through treaties and customary international law, and despite increasing attention to those rights by both governments and scholars of international law and international relations, much remains to be done to prevent and punish even the most egregious violations of human dignity. Professor Neuborne\u27s Article and the extensive briefs to which he repeatedly refers recap the atrocities committed by the German Nazi regime and ask uneasy but necessary questions about the Nazi regime\u27s accomplices and their responsibility for what transpired in the death camps of Eastern Europe some sixty years ago. It invites one so inc...
The authors examine the potential of human rights litigation in the context of post-colonial conflic...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
This is a comment on an article by Professor Burt Neuborne, in which he describes in detail the Holo...
The legal aftermath of the Holocaust continues to unfold in U.S. courts. Most recently, the Seventh ...
On July 26, 2000, final approval was granted to a landmark $1.25 billion settlement of the claims of...
This article addresses the Holocaust-restitution litigation of the late 1990s, which resulted in spe...
This article traces the Nuremberg trials\u27 influence on human rights litigation in the United Stat...
Historically, international law consisted primarily of substantive norms, leaving it to individual n...
The class action lawsuit is our grand procedural experiment in collective justice. As against the U....
In this Article, Judge Schwebel reviews the cases of the International Court of Justice and its pred...
At the time this Article was written, delegations from forty-five countries were in the process of d...
International criminal tribunals have emerged as the most tangible and well-known mechanism for seek...
There is an international human rights law aspect to Grutter v. Bollinger 1 and Gratz v. Bollinger 2...
Judge Kaufman held in a 1980 decision that a non-US citizen could file civil suits in the U.S. for h...
The authors examine the potential of human rights litigation in the context of post-colonial conflic...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
This is a comment on an article by Professor Burt Neuborne, in which he describes in detail the Holo...
The legal aftermath of the Holocaust continues to unfold in U.S. courts. Most recently, the Seventh ...
On July 26, 2000, final approval was granted to a landmark $1.25 billion settlement of the claims of...
This article addresses the Holocaust-restitution litigation of the late 1990s, which resulted in spe...
This article traces the Nuremberg trials\u27 influence on human rights litigation in the United Stat...
Historically, international law consisted primarily of substantive norms, leaving it to individual n...
The class action lawsuit is our grand procedural experiment in collective justice. As against the U....
In this Article, Judge Schwebel reviews the cases of the International Court of Justice and its pred...
At the time this Article was written, delegations from forty-five countries were in the process of d...
International criminal tribunals have emerged as the most tangible and well-known mechanism for seek...
There is an international human rights law aspect to Grutter v. Bollinger 1 and Gratz v. Bollinger 2...
Judge Kaufman held in a 1980 decision that a non-US citizen could file civil suits in the U.S. for h...
The authors examine the potential of human rights litigation in the context of post-colonial conflic...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...