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CLR Forum is an impressive new entry to the law professor blogosphere has been launched by my St. John's colleagues Mark Movsesian and Marc DeGirolami.  The CLR Forum is the official blog of the St.John's Center for Law and Religion, a center which in just one year has put itself on the map hosting conferences and significant scholarly exchange...

Apropos of Kevin's post below criticizing China's new criminal procedure law amendments, it is worth noting that some Chinese legal scholars are defending the consistency of such laws with international treaties.  China's draft amendment to the Criminal Procedure Law will further help protect human rights, and conforms rather than contradicts international conventions, legal experts in Beijing have said. The experts made the...

(Shameless self-promotion alert!)  I have been meaning to mention a new essay of mine in a fine symposium issue of the Brooklyn Journal of International Law that came out a few weeks ago, 'Accountability' as 'Legitimacy': Global Governance, Global Civil Society, and the United Nations. I've linked to the SSRN page, but I see that all the articles from the symposium issue are up on Westlaw.  I've put the abstract below the fold, but I suppose I should say that not all my time is spent droning about drones ... accountability, legitimacy, and governance in international institutions and civil society are also big interests.  However, I want to emphasize the papers in the whole symposium issue (here is the link to the BJIL) - it was a wide-ranging and intellectually vigorous conference and the published papers are terrific.

The NYT reports on an interesting strategy by an Italian village to avoid political oblivion. Statehood and independence! The mayor of Filettino has loftier aspirations: he wants his town in the hills east of Rome — population 598 — to become an independentstate under a monarch. “If that’s what it takes to keep the town autonomous and protect its natural resources,” said the...

Not shocking, really. Aug 29, 2011 (Voice of America News/ContentWorks via COMTEX) -- Libya's rebel government said Sunday it will not extradite the Libyan man convicted in the 1988 bombing of a U.S.-bound jetliner which killed 270 people when it exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland. Mohammed al-Alagi, the Transitional National Council's justice minister, told reporters in Tripoli that Abdel Baset al-Megrahi already has been...

Adam Entous and Siobhan Gorman of the Wall Street Journal's national security reporting team have a good discussion of the targeted killing-drone strike on August 22, 2011 that killed Attiyah Abd al-Rahman, Al-Qaeda's second in command. A considerable part of the Pakistani government's irritation with the conduct of drone strikes is that the US not only does not seek permission -...

As some readers may know, I spent four years writing television in Los Angeles -- law, cop, and terrorism shows -- before becoming an academic.  When I wrote scripts, I prided myself on accuracy: although I occasionally took artistic license, I always tried to get the law and facts right as best I could.  So it bothers me to no...

The Wall Street Journal's Siobhan Gorman has an interesting profile today of Michael Morell, a veteran CIA insider (31 years in) who is tapped to help guide the new director, David Petraeus, as he steps out of the uniform and into the suit, through the maze of internal CIA culture.  (It might be behind the subscriber wall.) In a rare interview,...

Last week I posted about the challenges to and importance of judicial review of war measures against U.S. citizens.  This post will use the bin Laden killing to explore the issue in the context of targeting --- hopefully in manner accessible to the average reader.  After reviewing issues likely preventing prior judicial adjudication or review of a potentially lethal (“kill...

Expect to hear more of this in the next few days from the anti-Obama progressive left. NATO commanders who authorized the Libya bombing campaign should be “held accountable” to international law and hauled before the world court for civilian deaths, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-Ohio) said Tuesday. “NATO’s top commanders may have acted under color of international law, but they are not exempt...