May 2021 International Law Top Blawgs
By University of Miami law professor Michael Froomkin. Covers civil liberties, the Internet, Guantanamo, Iraq attrocities, politics and more.
Covers human rights, free speech, death penalty, LGBT rights, refugees and torture. From Amnesty International.
Features voices on international law, policy and practice.
Covers news and discussion on the conflict of laws in private international law cases. Editor is Martin George of the University of Birmingham. Published in association with the Journal of Private International Law.
Edited by Professor Jacob Katz Cogan.
Coveres actions taken or contemplated to protect the nation interact with the nation’s laws and legal institutions, including cybersecurity, Guantánamo habeas litigation, targeted killing, biosecurity, universal jurisdiction, the Alien Tort Statute, and the state secrets privilege. By Benjamin Wittes, Jack Goldsmith and Robert Chesney.
Covers intellectual property in China.
Covers China business, travel and news. By Harris Bricken.
Summarizes and translates decisions of the US Supreme Court (and occasionally the California Supreme Court) which may be of interest to Swiss legal professionals.
Covers the Department of Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control and its Specially Designated Nationals list. By McNabb Associates, P.C.
Provides information about the death penalty in Asia.
Covers comparative law and judicial decision making. By Jacco Bomhoff.
Covers international laws of war, international law, related human rights topics, international NGOs, and the theory of the just war. By Professor Kenneth Anderson.
An international, interdisciplinary community for the study of legal and normative mixtures and movements.
By Professor Mark E. Wojcik and Cindy Galway Buys.
Covers international private law (conflicts of law) and international commercial arbitration law and jurisprudence (in Spanish). By Julio Cesar Cordoba and Maria B. Noodt Taquela.
Covers law, politics, and foreign policy by legal teachers, scholars, fellows and researchers.
Cardozo law student division of CRI founded by 2010 Cardozo graduates Danielle Goldstein and Benjamin Ryberg. CRI-Cardozo has over 40 student members and is dedicated to raising awareness about human rights abuses against children.
Covers American customs law and international trade law. By Lawrence Friedman.