Skip to main content

Blogs

Blogs Archive
Human Rights March 16, 2023
Mébét Movie Screening and Roundtable on Child Marriage
The movie screening and roundtable event focused on the practice of childhood marriage in The Gambia and beyond. The film displayed both sides of culture, showing both its beauty and dangers of it. Following the film was a discussion with the director, Ousman Jarju, a child marriage survivor, Musu Bakoto Sawo, and the Director of Women’s and Gender Studies, Professor Jamie Small.
Read More
Law March 15, 2023
Leading With Your Best
See why Simeon Lyons ’19 decided to use his law degree to serve in the U.S. Army JAG Corps.
Read More
Human Rights March 14, 2023
VOICES: Uniting Dayton for human rights
Tony Talbott writes for the Dayton Daily News Ideas & Voices about Uniting Dayton for Human Rights.
Read More
Human Rights March 08, 2023
When the Ferguson uprising came to Geneva

HRC Director of Applied Research and Learning, Dr Joel Pruce writes for Open Global Rights about how a shadow report presented to the Committee Against Torture brought police brutality in the US to the international human rights community.

Read More
Human Rights February 27, 2023
Law Student Insights on Critical Race and Feminist Legal Theory Series (Part 4)
While lawfare may be a recent concept in legal academia, its use dates back generations in the United States. A prime example of lawfare in motion is the War on Drugs, a generational effort to disrupt minority communities under the mask of curbing drug usage. The War on Drugs failed to end drug usage in the United States, but it achieved substantial growth in the jail system, an increase unevenly made up of people of color.
Read More
Human Rights February 24, 2023
Law Student Insights on Critical Race and Feminist Legal Theory Series (Part 3)
The “reasonable person” standard used in US law since the 1800s is outdated, because it ignores issues of  race and gender, and  contributes to negative qualities of colorblindness in the legal community. This objective standard of rationality creates inequality in the legal field that affects many minorities.
Read More
Human Rights February 22, 2023
Law Student Insights on Critical Race and Feminist Legal Theory Series (Part 2)
In 2022, two million people are imprisoned in America and around 35% of them are Black men. A direct link exists between the American systems of slavery, forced convict labor and the modern mass incarceration of Black men.
Read More
Law February 21, 2023
Remembering Law Professor Allen Sultan

Allen Sultan, who died at the age of 92, left a lasting legacy with the students he taught.

Read More
Human Rights February 21, 2023
Law Student Insights on Critical Race and Feminist Legal Theory Series (Part 1)
Critical race and feminist legal theory are academic concepts that deal with various issues and social constructs but cross over in one theory: intersectionality. You may have heard the term intersectionality discussed in the news and media, but do you really understand what intersectionality is and why it is important?
Read More
Human Rights February 09, 2023
Constitutional Resilience and the COVID-19 Pandemic: Perspectives from Sub-Saharan Africa
On January 12, 2023, the Human Rights Center, in partnership with the Frances Lewis Law Center Washington and Lee School of Law, Lexington, VA, the Dullah Omar Institute for Constitutional Law, Governance and Human Rights, University of the Western Cape, South Africa in association with the Center for Global Affairs, New York University hosted the book launch, Constitutional Resilience and the COVID-19 Pandemic: Perspectives from Sub-Saharan Africa.
Read More