Recent Posts

Here's a smart idea out of New Haven: issuing ID cards to city residents regardless of immigration status. According to this report, some 10-12,000 undocumented aliens living in New Haven are eligible for the card, which will allow immigrants to fill prescriptions and access local banks, libraries, and public services. "Most importantly, it will designate them as full-fledged participants...

[Ariel Meyerstein received his J.D. from Boalt Hall (2006) and is currently a PhD candidate, Jurisprudence and Social Policy Program. His recent scholarship includes, "Between Law and Culture: Rwanda's Gacaca and Postcolonial Legality," 32 Law and Social Inquiry 467-508 (2007), "Transitional Justice and Post-Conflict Israel/Palestine: Assessing the Applicability of the Truth Commission Paradigm," 38 Case Western Reserve Journal of International...

Transnational Law & Contemporary Problems has just released a symposium issue on "National Security: Detention, War Powers, and Anti-Proliferation" edited by my friend at Iowa, Tung Yin. The issue includes articles by our blogging colleagues Diane Amann, Steven Vladeck, and Tung himself, all of which are worth checking out. I also want to call attention to the article...

Grist, a website dedicated to environmental news and commentary, has released its list of the world's 15 greenest cities. Despite the unconscionable omission of Auckland, I present them here:1. Reyjavik, Iceland 2. Portland, Oregon 3. Curitiba, Brazil 4. Malmo, Sweden 5. Vancouver, Canada 6. Copenhagen, Denmark 7. London, England 8. San Francisco, California 9. Bahia de Caraquez, Ecuador 10....

I normally look forward (if that is the right expression) to movies about the Holocaust. But I don't know how I feel about this one:German and Israeli filmmakers have come together to tackle the subject of the Holocaust for the first time in an ambitious screen adaptation of a bestselling novel. Their groundbreaking collaboration over the highly sensitive topic has...

Not a good week for U.N. peacekeepers. A confidential U.N. report described in this Washington Post story concludes that Pakistani peacekeepers in Congo have been helping steal that country's gold. According to the U.N., the blue helmets only helped local plunderers, while Human Rights Watch says they were directly involved in the looting. But that seems virtually harmless compared to...

Here's something I didn't know: Israeli descendants of German survivors of the Holocaust are eligible for German citizenship. And they are getting it in large numbers:Holding her brand-new German passport, Avital Direktor, 29, of Azor, just had to laugh. "What a crazy world," she thought to herself. "Germany's soil is drenched with my family's blood, and in spite of...

One of the most fundamental norms in international law is that a state cannot acquire territory through the use of force. This is understood to be an implication of the U.N. Charter’s ban on force in Art. 2(4): if war is illegal, then benefiting from it should also be illegal. Few major norms are as widely agreed on. Indeed, many...