This Article discusses the relationship in U.S. law between State, Federal, and international authorities on universal human rights. All U.S. State constitutions and the Federal Constitution recognize the inherent or inalienable rights of humanity. Yet despite having long accepted the binding force of universal human rights, U.S. courts and public officials have been hesitant to recognize non-U.S. authorities when identifying, interpreting, or enforcing these rights in practice. The U.S. government and courts view most international treaties and declarations concerning universal human rights as simple restatements of existing constitutional guarantees. U.S. courts and public officials have generally weighed foreign evidence of the requi...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
The United States has been reluctant to agree to binding international human rights instruments ever...
We argue that human rights are best conceived as norms arising from a fiduciary relationship that ex...
This Article discusses the relationship in U.S. law between State, Federal, and international author...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...
In this article it is contended that state practice, as evidenced in the declarations of the judicia...
Short of natural law or an unwritten constitution, I have heard no principled explanation to justify...
Scholars have written volumes about the dramatic constitutional changes that occurred in the United ...
This Article examines the adoption of rights in national constitutions in the post-World War II peri...
The article examines the concept of universalism of human rights, which came into prominence after W...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
This article challenges the claims made by the United States that the civil rights system in this co...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
Human rights are universal. Not in the sense of being the same positive laws, at all times and place...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
The United States has been reluctant to agree to binding international human rights instruments ever...
We argue that human rights are best conceived as norms arising from a fiduciary relationship that ex...
This Article discusses the relationship in U.S. law between State, Federal, and international author...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...
In this article it is contended that state practice, as evidenced in the declarations of the judicia...
Short of natural law or an unwritten constitution, I have heard no principled explanation to justify...
Scholars have written volumes about the dramatic constitutional changes that occurred in the United ...
This Article examines the adoption of rights in national constitutions in the post-World War II peri...
The article examines the concept of universalism of human rights, which came into prominence after W...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
This article challenges the claims made by the United States that the civil rights system in this co...
The concept of human rights, supposedly of universal importance, is usually derived from the traditi...
Human rights are universal. Not in the sense of being the same positive laws, at all times and place...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
The United States has been reluctant to agree to binding international human rights instruments ever...
We argue that human rights are best conceived as norms arising from a fiduciary relationship that ex...