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Rights and counter-terrorism policy report [UK Parliament] News
Rights and counter-terrorism policy report [UK Parliament]
December 14, 2007 10:31:00 am

Counter-Terrorism Policy and Human Rights: 42 days, Joint Committee on Human Rights, December 14, 2007 [opposing a proposal by the UK government to extend the time limit on detaining terror suspects without charge]. Read the full text of the report [PDF]. Reported in JURIST's Paper Chase here.

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Latest DISPATCHES
India dispatch: high court grants bail in honor killing case, calls casteism a national curse

India dispatch: high court grants bail in honor killing case, calls casteism a national curse

Taiwan dispatch: Ministry condemns China after Kenya blocks delegates from Ocean Conference

Taiwan dispatch: Ministry condemns China after Kenya blocks delegates from Ocean Conference

Latest COMMENTARY
The Olive Branch Britain Ignored: How a 1774 Appeal Paved the Road to Independence

The Olive Branch Britain Ignored: How a 1774 Appeal Paved the Road to Independence

by Rabbi Joseph Fred Benson
Corn, Comedy and Hermeneutics: Reading the Iran–US Memorandum as Legal Irony

Corn, Comedy and Hermeneutics: Reading the Iran–US Memorandum as Legal Irony

by AmirAli Maleki
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An Interview with Emeritus Dean Steve Kanter On His Involvement In The Making of Kazakhstan’s Constitution

‘When a state decides it can’t win, it begins to punish civilians’ — An interview with former UN chief prosecutor David M. Crane

‘When a state decides it can’t win, it begins to punish civilians’ — An interview with former UN chief prosecutor David M. Crane

THIS DAY @ LAW

Sir Thomas More beheaded for treason

On July 6, 1535, former Lord Chancellor Sir Thomas More was beheaded in London after being convicted of treason against King Henry VIII. More had not supported the King's policy toward the church or his marriage to Anne Boleyn, had refused to swear to the Act of Succession, and had similarly declined to take the Oath of Supremacy. His last words before execution are said to have been "The King's good servant, but God's first."

Supreme Court upholds death sentence for racially motivated murder

On July 6, 1983, the US Supreme Court upheld the death sentence that was given in part for the racial motivation behind a murder in Barclay v. Florida.

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