Recent Posts

Interested in learning more about the political farce that the military commissions have become? Run, don't walk, to Scott Horton's fantastic "The Great Guantanamo Puppet Theater" at Harpers.com. On these issues, Scott (like Marty Lederman) is always an invaluable read. ...

During my latest blog-blackout, I missed the latest from Uganda. Apparently, the LRA-Uganda peace talks have reached agreement on a domestic process for prosecuting war crimes. The Ugandan government and the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) rebels on Tuesday signed a major agreement on how to deal with crimes committed during the brutal nearly 22-year insurgency in northern Uganda. The...

Judith Resnik gave an interesting talk on local foreign policymaking at Peggy McGuinness’ terrific Missouri v. Holland symposium week before last, based an article she has forthcoming in the Emory Law Journal (proofs here). She catalogues all the (mostly good) ways in which localities are emerging as international actors. Some of the themes echo others' work (see for...

Well, sort of. Obama has racked up another impressive primary victory, this time among Democrats living abroad. The contest was held between February 5 and 12, and included Internet voting in addition to the more conventional mail balloting. Otherwise it's not a new phenomenon - Democrats Abroad has been holding primaries since 1976. Two things that are interesting...

Last year, I participated in a symposium at Lewis & Clark Law School--Crimes, War Crimes and the War on Terror. The symposium edition of the Lewis & Clark Law Review (vol. 11) containing the resulting essays is now out. Here's the line-up: John R. Kroger & John T. Parry, Introduction Kelly Moore, The Role of Federal Criminal Prosecutions in the...

[Tai-Heng Cheng is Associate Professor of Law at New York Law School. His most recent book is State Succession and Commercial Obligations.] I am grateful to Roger Alford for inviting me to share some thoughts on the recent developments in Kosovo. On February 17, 2008, Kosovo’s parliament voted to declare independence from Serbia. This unilateral declaration accelerated the...

At a joint press conference with Paul Kagame yesterday, President Bush was asked whether he would be willing to send U.S. troops to Darfur to help stop the systematic violence that is being committed there. Here, in relevant part, was his response:I would say it's like — as I explained to this fellow here — that one of the...