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Institute for Global Legal Studies


URL: http://news-info.wustl.edu/group/page/normal/100.html

Media Assistance:

Jessica Martin
Director, News & Information for the School of Law and the George Warren Brown School of Social Work
jessica_martin@wustl.edu

(314) 935-5251
Home Page: http://law.wustl.edu/igls/current.html

Email: igls@wulaw.wustl.edu

Telephone: (314) 935-7988

We live in a truly global age. People, goods, services, information, and capital flow freely across international boundaries. From the Internet, e-mail, and fax machines to travel, migration, commerce, and foreign relations, the story of the new millennium will be our ever shrinking planet. The world's problems -- and the problems entrusted to lawyers -- will increasingly require international cooperation and international solutions.

Our new Institute for Global Legal Studies was created for such a world. Through a combination of educational and research programs, the Institute will draw on international and comparative law to expand our knowledge and understanding of real-world issues. It will utilize the vast pool of talent overseas and promote interaction between the students and faculty of Washington University and their colleagues from other nations.

In the process, the Institute will foster a vibrant international environment within the four walls of the law school and throughout the Washington University campus. It will help make the school a first-choice institution for more of the talented students and distinguished faculty whom we want to attract. Beyond our own workplace, the Institute promises to build the reputation of the law school within the United States and abroad. We intend to become one of the world's premier international centers.


News Stories & Tip Sheets:

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Supreme Court Guantanamo decision

International law expert comments on status of Guantanamo Bay detainees (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/11935.html)

June 18, 2008 --
Sadat
The Supreme Court's recent ruling giving the Guantanamo Bay detainees the right of habeas corpus "underscores the commitment of the United States to be governed by the rule of law even during times of national stress, and is a courageous response to the overreaching policies of the executive branch, buttressed by a compliant Republican Congress, that have caused world-wide criticism of U.S. interrogation and detention policies," says Leila N. Sadat, expert on international law and professor of law at Washington University in St. Louis. Sadat, the director of the Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute, is the author of the leading treatise on the international criminal court, "The International Criminal Court and the Transformation of International Law: Justice for the New Millennium," and is closely following the status of the detainees at Guantanamo.


Blue-ribbon steering committee drafting international treaty

Harris World Law Institute kicks off landmark Crimes Against Humanity Project (http://news-info.wustl.edu/news/page/normal/11641.html)

April 25, 2008 -- The Whitney R. Harris World Law Institute of Washington University School of Law announced a two-year project to study the international law regarding crimes against humanity and to draft a multilateral treaty condemning and prohibiting such crimes. Leila Sadat, J.D., the Henry H. Oberschelp Professor of Law and director of the Harris Institute, recently convened the first meeting of the project's steering committee.


Repairing the U.S. asylum system

Leading immigration law expert examines dramatic inconsistencies; cautions against drastic responses (http://news-info.wustl.edu/tips/page/normal/11166.html)

Feb. 27, 2008 --
Stephen Legomsky
Legomsky
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A recent academic study confirmed empirically what many immigration experts had already suspected: The chance of winning an asylum case often hinges as much on the luck of the draw as on the merits of the case. Some adjudicators grant asylum liberally while others grant it only rarely, and the disparities are dramatic. The Stanford Law Review asked Stephen Legomsky, J.D., D.Phil., leading immigration and asylum law expert and John S. Lehmann University Professor at Washington University in St. Louis, to write an article analyzing the policy implications of this study. Legomsky offers a controversial conclusion: "There are times when we simply have to learn to live with unequal justice because the alternatives are worse."



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Faculty Experts:

Showing 2 Experts.
John Haley

Wiley B. Rutledge Professor of Law (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/71.html)

John Haley
John Haley
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John Haley is one of the nation's outstanding international and comparative law scholars and is widely credited with having popularized Japanese legal studies. His numerous scholarly works span issues ranging from international trade policy and comparative law to Japanese land-use law, Japanese and ...


Expertise: Japanese law, comparative law, international business transactions, international trade policy, transnational litigation, East Asian studies, contracts

Direct contact: (314) 935-8231 / johaley@wulaw.wustl.edu


Stephen Legomsky

John S. Lehmann University Professor (http://news-info.wustl.edu/sb/page/normal/76.html)

Stephen Legomsky
Stephen Legomsky
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Dr. Stephen H. Legomsky, an internationally renowned immigration law expert, is the author of Immigration and Refugee Law and Policy (now in its 3rd edition), which has been adopted as the required text for immigration courses at more than 140 American law schools. He has testified before Congress ...


Expertise: immigration, refugees, international criminal law, international human rights, international law, torts, international legal process, …

Direct contact: (314) 935-6469 / legomsky@wulaw.wustl.edu



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Related News Clips:

Showing 2 Clips.
2nd Hussein Trial Defense Lawyer Slain
Los Angeles Times

Nov. 9, 2005 -- Gunmen killed a second defense lawyer in the trial of Saddam Hussein and seven co-defendants on Tuesday, throwing the controversial proceedings into greater turmoil and casting new doubt on the credibility of the tribunal.
WUSTL law professor Leila Nadya Sadat, who helped train Iraqi jurists, comments.


Case against Haitian-born citizen could reset naturalization standards
Grand Forks Herald Online (North Dakota) and 16 others

Jan. 12, 2005 -- An unprecedented court ruling on stripping a foreign-born person's U.S. citizenship may give the federal government a potent new tool for rooting out naturalized immigrants with criminal pasts, some legal experts say. WUSTL immigration law professor Stephen Legomsky joins the discussion.


Additional Information: Stephen H. Legomsky, the Charles F. Nagel Professor of International and Comparative Law, is the inaugural Director of the new Institute. Our strong international and comparative law faculty will form the nucleus of an internal advisory board, which will participate actively in the planning and operation of the Institute. An external board of respected statesmen, international judges, distinguished international law scholars, international industrialists, and other prominent people will also advise the Director and will additionally assist with visibility, contacts, and fundraising.

The Institute's core activity will be annual conferences on topics of contemporary global importance. Each conference will be planned two years in advance by a different member of the law faculty, often in collaboration with a foreign colleague. With generous funding, ample advance notice, and lofty ambitions, the aim is to attract the most impressive minds in the world, elicit first-rate papers, arrange publication by a premier academic press, and distribute the book widely.

Other Institute activities are currently under discussion. These include a series of distinguished United States and international speakers; fellowships for visiting scholars; a stream of publications to inform U.S. and international colleagues, government officials, prospective students, and alumni and other friends of the law school about the activities of the Institute and the law school; and applications for grants and other fundraising.

Other existing law school operations are also international in nature -- recruiting JD and graduate law students interested in international law; planning an international curriculum; advising students about international curricular choices; advising foreign students; helping find overseas jobs for students and graduates; assisting the International Law Students Association, the Jessup International Moot Court team and the Global Studies Law Review; administering the foreign student LLM program; and building the international law library collection. The Institute will likely play supportive and advisory roles in these endeavors. Since many contemporary issues cross both national and disciplinary boundaries, the Institute will also collaborate with the new Center for Interdisciplinary Studies on specific projects and in the sharing of resources.



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