Legislating Atrocity Prevention

   
Summary

Legislating Atrocity Prevention

Description

This year marks the 25th anniversary of the Rwandan genocide. Lessons learned from that tragedy include the need for legal advancements in atrocity prevention and response. Two such pieces of legislation—the Syrian War Crimes Accountability Act and the Elie Wiesel Genocide and Atrocities Prevention Act—recently became law in the United States. These landmark acts unprecedentedly enshrine “atrocity prevention” and define “transitional justice” in U.S. law. Amid an era in the United States that is more polarized than any time since the Civil War, that each law garnered overwhelming support from both Democrat and Republican officials demonstrates that Americans can still agree on at least some basic principles. This Article provides the first comprehensive analysis of these groundbreaking laws and how they relate to studies on atrocity prevention and transitional justice.

Starts

3:00pm on Wednesday, November 13th 2019

End Time

5:00pm

URL

http://www.bu.edu/cura/kaufman-talk/

Topics

Alumni, Lectures, LAW Community, Global, Diversity & Inclusion

Speaker(s)

Zachary D. Kaufman, J.D., Ph.D. Associate Professor of Law and Political Science, University of Houston Law Center

Event Open To

public

Information Phone

353-5241

Contact Name

Arlene Brennan

Building

154 Bay State Rd.

Room

Eilts Room

Contact Email

arleneb@bu.edu

Contact Organization

CURA

Show Who

yes

Show Contact

yes

Show Fees

free

 
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