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Abstract
The Bush administration tried to justify its behavior with outlandish legal opinions that claimed extraordinary powers for the president to disobey laws passed by Congress and international treaties like the Geneva Conventions. Those actions continue to provide excuses for governments of other countries to engage in undemocratic behavior and violate human rights. It is not enough for the Obama administration to simply say that we are changing our policies going forward.
Re-establishing the rule of law requires insisting on some accountability — though that need not necessarily take the form of criminal liability, at least initially. Such a commission would help bring to light what happened and why, and would solidify our nation’s repudiation of these illegal actions.
Other publications by this author
- The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law
- The Extraterritorial Constitution and the Rule of Law
- International Courts and the U.S. Constitution
- Scholars' Statement of Principles for the New President on U.S. Detention Policy: An Agenda for Change
- Patricia McGowan Wald
- The Mess Left Behind
- Antislavery Courts and the Dawn of International Human Rights Law
- Process and Substance in the "War on Terror"
- Questions of Justice
- Slave Trade on Trial: Lessons of a Great Human Rights Law Success
Author
- Jenny S. Martinez
- Stanford Law School
- jmartinez@law.stanford.edu
- 650 725.2749