Revues de droit et science ouverte : écosystème, pratiques des chercheurs, rôle des bibliothèques
#France #LawJournal #OpenScience #PierreGuibourg #ScholarlyJournals #ScientificCommunication
Revues de droit et science ouverte : écosystème, pratiques des chercheurs, rôle des bibliothèques
#France #LawJournal #OpenScience #PierreGuibourg #ScholarlyJournals #ScientificCommunication
No #Legal Grey Zones left for #Cryptocurrency Players That Skirt Federal Anti-#MoneyLaundering aka #AML laws
https://www.law.com/newyorklawjournal/2024/01/04/aml-enforcement-in-2023-no-grey-zones-for-cryptocurrency-providers/ via #NewYork #LawJournal
Happy #IDPWD colleagues, comrades and community!
Natalie Wade and I got you a present. Well, it is probably a practical present for the Attorney-General, but you might like to open it for him.
The article is free until 31 December 2023 to celebrate IDPWD (thanks Leadership from SAGE Journals and Deb Candy).
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/1037969X231206831
Enjoy!
- from Graeme and Nat
#DisabilityRights #AccessToJustice #HumanRights #LawJournal #DDAReform
Sikhs in America: “Perpetually Foreign, Automatically Suspect, and Potentially Terrorist”
In a new essay for California Law Review Online, Henna Kaur Kaushal '20 tells the story of Sikh immigration to the United States and the suspicion and mistreatment that followed—and continues to follow—Sikh in America.
This essay examines two points in American history during which the United States effectively perceived Sikhs as terrorists even while they sought freedom from oppressive regimes, first British and then Indian. Although Sikh immigrants resided on U.S. soil, the United States’ alliances with the colonizing British government and the successor Indian government contributed to the criminalization of Sikh immigrants who were involved in political struggles against those entities. This history reveals how Sikhs have been caught in the nexus of criminal law and immigration law for over a century. Awareness of this history, in turn, allows us to contextualize the current immigration issues facing Sikhs within the broader landscape of Sikh American subjugation. [...]