Two recent appeals hearings ended with senior figures from Serbia and Croatia being fully exonerated. Worryingly, their acquittals were hailed at home as vindication of their respective sides’ wartime actions. By Rachel Irwin When appeals judges at the Hague tribunal quashed the conviction of Momcilo Perisic for crimes committed during the 1990s war in […]
The Tao of Saigon Horn:Part Two
But Ellis says it is “not the use of animal parts per se that is the problem – it is the slaughter of animals for what might be specious applications, or worse, the slaughter of critically endangered species”. The solution he offers is: “Even those who have used animal parts for thousands of years […]
THOUGHTS ON A RAINY DAY
THOUGHTS ON A RAINY DAY! What do you do when incessant rains preclude your leaving the house? Simple- you stay indoors. And what does one do when there is no electricity and your laptop battery is ‘dead’? Not so simple- cursing your luck, you start off by staring at the walls and then begin thinking. […]
Substantive Objectivity: Embracing a Journalistic Norm of Verification
by Matthew L. Schafer Press critics love to discuss journalistic objectivity – or more to the point, whether such a thing actually exists at all. With the press (or at least cable television) returning to its partisan roots, it is unsurprising that journalistic objectivity is receiving renewed attention. Why do critics spend time ruminating over […]
Criminal Justice Coordination Committee Meeting Held
Monthly Criminal Justice Coordination Committee held. CHITRAL: Monthly Criminal Justice Coordination Committee (CJCC ) meeting was held under the chair of District & Session Judge (Zilla Qazi) Syed Zamarud Shah at Session Court Chitral. Chairman of CJCC session judge stressed upon that oils and ceasing officials must use seal of their own names on the […]
Healthcare and the Supreme Court – Losing the Legal Forest for the Political Trees
NFIB v. Sebelius is the caption atop the Supreme Court’s recent ruling on the constitutionality of the Affordable Care Act. Thirty, fifty, even a hundred years from now, law students will be grilled on NFIB v. Sebelius as part of their first-year Constitutional Law classes. And when law professors lecture (or Socratically harass) their students […]
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