The Gambia v. Myanmar: Changing the Landscape of International Prosecution for Genocide

By Anna Henson.

During preliminary proceedings, the International Court of Justice (ICJ) held that The Gambia has standing to bring suit against Myanmar for actions taken against the UN Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. This is the first ICJ case where a country, located on a different continent and lacking immediate personal injury, has been able to sue another country on the basis of both countries being a party to a UN convention.

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Anna Henson
Venezuelan Refugees: A Call for Help from the International Community

By Jennifer Churay.

Countries should provide this assistance to Venezuelans for two reasons: (1) humanitarian and (2) political. Humanitarian assistance is needed because, without a global response, conditions for Venezuelan refugees will worsen as regional host countries become increasingly unable or unwilling to provide aid. Conditions in Venezuela are so severe that human rights violations may ensue because access to life-sustaining resources and immigration protections guaranteed by international human rights agreements are not being delivered.

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Jennifer Churay
Say Her Name: Kurdish Erasure in Iran’s Protests

By Ilina Krishen.

Narratives around Jina “Mahsa” Amini’s death and the ensuing mass protests erase the crucial fact that Amini was a Kurdish woman. The examination of Amini’s death, policing of women’s bodies, and women’s freedom in Iran must place much needed attention towards Iran's long-oppressed Kurdish minority. More importantly, Jina Amini’s name and Kurdish identity should not be erased.

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Ilina Krishen
Blood Cobalt: How Congolese Children Power Your Smartphone

By Haley Wehner.

The world’s largest known source of cobalt, a crucial metal in the lithium-ion batteries that power everything from smartphones to electric vehicles, is hidden beneath the Democratic Republic of Congo’s (DRC) fertile red soil. Without cobalt, people around the world would not be able to send emails, check social media, operate an electric car, or fly home for the holidays. Approximately seventy percent of the cobalt consumed worldwide is produced in the DRC, outpacing its two nearest rivals, Australia and Russia. Overall, it is believed that the DRC contains undeveloped mineral resources worth $24 trillion.

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Haley Wehner
Examining the Short and Long-Term Effects of Western Sanctions on Russia

By Brittany Macaddino.

On February 4, 2022, comprehensive sanctions were placed on an international superpower for the first time since the end of the World War II. The United States, European Union, and others coordinated their efforts against Russia to stifle their economic abilities and hinder their invasion of Ukraine. Nearly a year later, sanctions against Russia are expected to tighten in 2023. But are the sanctions imposed against Russia working the way major powers intended, and is it sustainable for the world economy to continue imposing them?

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Brittany Macaddino
Pope Francis’ Visit to Canada Highlights Legal Significance of the Discovery Doctrine

By Kaitlin Lapka.

In June 2022, Pope Francis visited Canada in an attempt to repair the Catholic Church’s historical relationship with Indigenous Peoples in Canada. Calling his tour a “penitential pilgrimage,” the Pope “humbly beg[ged] for forgiveness” for the Church’s past actions but refused to take one final step Canada’s Indigenous communities demanded: Renounce the Discovery Doctrine.

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Kaitlin Lapka
A White Paper Revolution

By Taylor Schanz.

At the end of 2022, thousands of protestors took to the streets across eighteen different cities in China. Instead of protest signs, individuals were holding blank white A4 paper, calling for the Chinese government to end its zero-COVID policy. While protests are not an uncommon occurrence in China, this was the first time since the failed pro-democracy movement in 1989 that a protest has reached this magnitude and earned the name “white paper revolution.”

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Taylor Schanz
Brazil’s Failed Coup and the Fate of Democracy

By Markus Richard.

Protests persisted even after Lula’s inauguration, culminating in an assault on government buildings that host Brazil’s executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government. The protestors heeded calls across pro-Bolsonaro social media channels to head to the capital and “surround Brasilia,” presumably in an attempt to overwhelm the government and overthrow it.

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Markus Richard
To Strike or Not to Strike: Workers in the United Kingdom Must Decide

By Ashton Holland.

Officials in the United Kingdom have introduced legislation to maintain minimum service levels for health, education, fire and rescue, transportation, border security, and decommissioning of nuclear installations. This legislation forces employers to maintain a certain level of working employees during strikes to prevent severe disruption to the general public.

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Ashton Holland
Legalizing Same-Sex Marriage in South Korea

By Michael Reingold.

South Korea has yet to legalize same-sex marriage, and the future of same-sex marriage for LGBTQ South Koreans is bleak. Many articles of the South Korean Constitution, however, pave a way for reform and enable South Korea to legalize same-sex marriage in the future — even as South Korean courts continually and arbitrarily refuse to uphold and legalize same-sex marriages.

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Michael Reingold
Prison Conditions and Misconduct in Portugal

By Noah Thelen.

Despite Portugal having a remarkably low prison population — currently 118 per 100,000 individuals — the country is still plagued with police misconduct and issues over the treatment of prisoners. All of Europe is under strict review of policies from the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture and Inhumane or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (“CPT”).

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Noah Thelen
The Right to Die: Belgium’s Liberal Euthanasia Law

By Frankie Salamida.

Belgium legalized voluntary euthanasia in 2002 and currently has the most liberal euthanasia laws compared to any other country in the world. Some have wondered if these laws have gone too far, but physicians in Belgium believe they have not. With the number of safeguards in place and conditions that must be met, physicians assure that people who die via euthanasia are making an informed choice themselves. Thus, Belgium’s legalization gives these patients a right to die.

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Frankie Salamida
Financial Hardships Pressure Changes in Budapest

By Brittany Macaddino.

Hungary is one of the only countries who the EU is withholding pandemic relief funds from, citing concerns over rule of law issues within Hungary’s government. Now, Prime Minister Orban is being forced to strike a deal with the EU commission in order to secure these funds to prevent a recession.

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Brittany Macaddino
The Future of Work: The Importance of the Netherlands’ New “Right to Work From Home” Legislation

By Kaitlin Lapka.

The Netherlands is on track to becoming the first country in the world to make remote work, a legal right. Other countries interested in the future of employment law may want to follow suit. This past July, the lower house of the Dutch’s bicameral parliament, Tweede Kamer, passed an amendment to the nation’s Flexible Working Act 2015 that is now awaiting final approval from the upper house, Eerste Kamer.

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Kaitlin Lapka
Honduras’s Ban on Abortion: How Honduras Fails to Comply with the International Human Right to Reproductive Choice and Autonomy

By Madeline Jones.

The right to reproductive choice has been formally recognized in international human rights treaties and jurisprudence since 1968. Honduras has prohibited emergency contraception and abortion in all instances since 1982 and recently ratified the Honduran Constitution in January 2022 to explicitly ban abortion within the text of the Constitution. Honduras’s ban on abortion and emergency contraception goes against the principles of international human rights law and furthers discrimination against women.

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Madeline Jones
Banning Cultural Appropriation in Mexico

By Ashton Holland.

Cultural appropriation is defined as “the lifting of aspects of one culture or society for use by another culture.” To minimize this, Mexico has limited exploitation of their resident’s culture through the Federal Law for the Protection of the Cultural Heritage of Indigenous and Afro-Mexican People and Communities.

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Ashton Holland
Neocolonialism: Cobalt Mining in Democratic Republic of the Congo

By Anna Henson.

DRC is one of the most resource-rich countries in the world. Today, DRC tries to untangle the web weaved by centuries of colonialism and improve the lives of its citizens by stabilizing the economy. However, in order to do this, it has been selling mineral rights to one of today’s most valuable resources, cobalt, which is a critical component in lithium batteries (used in phones and electric cars). The result? Human rights questions and resurfacing colonialistic tendencies by its main investor: China.

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Anna Henson