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2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 732-737
Author(s):  
Nikolay A. Vlasenko

Dedicated to the 80th anniversary of the famous legal scholar Vladimir Mikhailovich Syrykh, the author of over 40 monographs, textbooks, teaching aids, many hundreds of scientific articles and other materials. The scientists contribution to legal science is analyzed. We focus on the methodology of the theory of law, method structure, content of the materialist theory of law, etc. The exceptional contribution of the scientist to preparation and publication of the Encyclopedic Dictionary Legal Science and Legal Ideology of Russia is distinguished. The ideas and assessments of the author's recent historical and legal monographs on the Soviet regime, the Red Terror, and Stalinist repressions are illustrated.


2021 ◽  
Vol 46 (4) ◽  
pp. 439-461
Author(s):  
Leon Sachs

This essay reflects on the relevance of French laïcité for the American college classroom. It begins with a discussion of philosopher Catherine Kintzler’s radical interpretation of laïcité as a theory of political association that takes the classroom as its model. According to this view, the autonomous learning contingent on doubt and self-correction that ideally occurs there is the basis for an egalitarian and collaborative production of knowledge, a model of a res publica. The essay then turns to legal scholar and philosopher Anthony Kronman’s analysis of classroom conversation and the “ethics of depersonalization.” It considers the extent to which these notions can be viewed as American translations of Kintzler’s laïcité. The essay concludes with a reading of American essayist Ta-Nehisi Coates’s bestselling 2015 memoir as an endorsement of the autonomous abstract individual, the linchpin of republican universalism, laïcité, and liberal education.


2021 ◽  
Vol 129 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-15
Author(s):  
Mylène Yannick Gamache

This article reads with Michi Saagiig Nishnaabe writer and independent scholar Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, and Nêhiyaw legal scholar and novelist Tracey Lindberg. The practice of reading with involves heeding textual instructions and prioritising narrative terms of engagement. Indigenous bodies layered with resurgent potential in Lindberg’s and Simpson’s fictions refuse to re-centre the legacy of white settler coloniality. Attending to the process of reading with, as a relational undertaking, involves re-apprising cross-generational legacies and re-membering collective responsibilities.


Contexts ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 61-63
Author(s):  
Barbara Harris Combs

I interrogate the killing of Ahmaud Arbery using critical race legal scholar Cheryl Harris’ view of whiteness as property. I offer a counter-narrative telling of events to explain how ideological principles rooted in the concept of whiteness as property continues to undergird the agreed upon practices in neighborhoods like Satilla Shores – where Arbery was pursued, shot, and killed by white residents of the development. In doing so, I explore how these principles and practices breed and foster a form of racialized injustice that gets routinely rationalized and excused through a set of normalizations, which privilege whiteness and white logic.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Witte, Jr.

Leading legal scholar John Witte, Jr. explores the role religion played in the development of rights in the Western legal tradition and traces the complex interplay between human rights and religious freedom norms in modern domestic and international law. He examines how US courts are moving towards greater religious freedom, while recent decisions of the pan-European courts in Strasbourg and Luxembourg have harmed new religious minorities and threatened old religious traditions in Europe. Witte argues that the robust promotion and protection of religious freedom is the best way to protect many other fundamental rights today, even though religious freedom and other fundamental rights sometimes clash and need judicious balancing. He also responds to various modern critics who see human rights as a betrayal of Christianity and religious freedom as a betrayal of human rights.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pablo Ruiz-Tagle

Like many countries around the world, Chile is undergoing a political moment when the nature of democracy and its political and legal institutions are being challenged. Senior Chilean legal scholar and constitutional historian Pablo Ruiz-Tagle provides an historical analysis of constitutional change and democratic crisis in the present context focused on Chilean constitutionalism. He offers a comparative analysis of the organization and function of government, the structure of rights and the main political agents that participated in each stage of Chilean constitutional history. Chile is a powerful case study of a Latin American country that has gone through several threats to its democracy, but that has once again followed a moderate path to rebuild its constitutional republican tradition. Not only the first comprehensive study of Chilean constitutional history in the English language from the nineteenth-century to the present day, this book is also a powerful defence of democratic values.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Sloan ◽  
Richard Warner

Online surveillance of our behavior by private companies is on the increase, particularly through the Internet of Things and the increasing use of algorithmic decision-making. This troubling trend undermines privacy and increasingly threatens our ability to control how information about us is shared and used. Written by a computer scientist and a legal scholar, The Privacy Fix proposes a set of evidence-based, practical solutions that will help solve this problem. Requiring no technical or legal expertise, the book explains complicated concepts in clear, straightforward language. Bridging the gap between computer scientists, economists, lawyers, and public policy makers, this book provides theoretically and practically sound public policy guidance about how to preserve privacy in the onslaught of surveillance. It emphasizes the need to make tradeoffs among the complex concerns that arise, and it outlines a practical norm-creation process to do so.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-48
Author(s):  
Roni Saepul Rohman ◽  
Taun Taun

Husbands have absolute rights and obligations in building a household. Vice versa, a wife has the same absolute rights and obligations in managing the household. There are still husbands or wifes who are negligent in carrying out their obligations and even do not carry them out. The Method used in this research is the normative legal research method,which is a study that examines a document, namely various secondary data such as statutory regulations, legal theory, court decisions and legal scholar opinions. The case that often occurs is neglect by husbands against theirs own wifes. There are many factors that cause a husband to abandon his wife and even his own family. However, a wife has the right to sue the husband in court by filing a claim for livelihood, which is a legal remedy that the wife can take to get justice.


2021 ◽  
Vol 103 (1) ◽  
pp. 4-4
Author(s):  
Rafael Heller

As legal scholar Martha Minow has pointed out, every school choice movement over the last century has created as many problems as it solved. Yet the movements remain appealing because of how much Americans value the freedom to choose. Rafael Heller explains that the authors in the September 2021 Kappan are less interested in whether school choice is good or bad than in how to weigh the many competing interests involved in choice programs.


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