The brilliant, eloquent, and internationally renowned American human rights advocate Professor Joan Fitzpatrick, who has died suddenly aged 52, was a practicing lawyer, academic, and campaigner. She will be remembered for her razor-sharp analysis, clear vision, and deeply principled approach to every issue she took on. And those issues were many: they included protection of refugees, promotion of women\u27s rights and respect for human rights during states of emergency. She also worked passionately against torture and the death penalty
Askin is a fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University as well as a lega...
When Jean Camper Cahn wrote these words in a 1984 tribute to civil rights scholar Clarence Clyde Fer...
With relatives displaced from their homes and a fiancée who was arbitrarily imprisoned and abused in...
Her scholarship embraced the rights of refugees and migrants, legal limits on the waging and methodo...
When I first met Joan Fitzpatrick, it was immediately apparent that she possessed a seemingly limitl...
Joan Fitzpatrick graduated from Harvard Law School in 1975. Women were then beginning to enter the l...
The International Journal of Human Rights Education honors the lives and contributions of the follow...
Typed obituary for longtime human rights advocate and Jacksonville native, Dr. Edna Louise Saffy (19...
Highlights MacArthur's support for the international justice system, development of new norms, inter...
Jo Ann Humphreys, Associate Director of the Law Library, died of ovarian cancer on October 19, 1996....
This Article consists of three parts: The author\u27s observations about the historical neglect of t...
These remarks were delivered as part of A Tribute to Justice, an event commemorating the 40th annive...
Patricia Gatling lives a life of service, whether in her New York City human rights position or her ...
Elvia Arriola is a Latina feminist law professor at Northern Illinois University. Her articles and t...
These remarks were delivered as part of A Tribute to Justice, an event commemorating the 40th annive...
Askin is a fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University as well as a lega...
When Jean Camper Cahn wrote these words in a 1984 tribute to civil rights scholar Clarence Clyde Fer...
With relatives displaced from their homes and a fiancée who was arbitrarily imprisoned and abused in...
Her scholarship embraced the rights of refugees and migrants, legal limits on the waging and methodo...
When I first met Joan Fitzpatrick, it was immediately apparent that she possessed a seemingly limitl...
Joan Fitzpatrick graduated from Harvard Law School in 1975. Women were then beginning to enter the l...
The International Journal of Human Rights Education honors the lives and contributions of the follow...
Typed obituary for longtime human rights advocate and Jacksonville native, Dr. Edna Louise Saffy (19...
Highlights MacArthur's support for the international justice system, development of new norms, inter...
Jo Ann Humphreys, Associate Director of the Law Library, died of ovarian cancer on October 19, 1996....
This Article consists of three parts: The author\u27s observations about the historical neglect of t...
These remarks were delivered as part of A Tribute to Justice, an event commemorating the 40th annive...
Patricia Gatling lives a life of service, whether in her New York City human rights position or her ...
Elvia Arriola is a Latina feminist law professor at Northern Illinois University. Her articles and t...
These remarks were delivered as part of A Tribute to Justice, an event commemorating the 40th annive...
Askin is a fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at Harvard University as well as a lega...
When Jean Camper Cahn wrote these words in a 1984 tribute to civil rights scholar Clarence Clyde Fer...
With relatives displaced from their homes and a fiancée who was arbitrarily imprisoned and abused in...