17 episodes

This collection features podcasts from the Yale Law School lectures on international law.

International Law Yale Law School

    • Science

This collection features podcasts from the Yale Law School lectures on international law.

    The Dictates of Justice: Essays on Law and Human Rights

    The Dictates of Justice: Essays on Law and Human Rights

    In this discussion, Yale Law School Sterling Professsor Emeritus Owen Fiss reflects upon his time advising Argentinian President Raúl Alfonsín and his administration during the human rights trials that the country conducted in the mid 1980s.
    From that experience, Professor Fiss came to see human rights as universal social ideals that are also deeply rooted in a country's processes of national self-determination. In his talk, Professor Fiss explains how states engaging in the transition from dictatorship to democracy, like Argentina, can protect human rights through civil, not just criminal, proceedings. Professor Fiss also takes on the human rights issues posed by the fight against terrorism in the post-9/11 era within the context of national law

    • 1 sec
    The Judge Who Cried: Social and Economic Rights as Judicially Enforceable Fundamental Rights

    The Judge Who Cried: Social and Economic Rights as Judicially Enforceable Fundamental Rights

    Renowned human rights activist and former South Africa Constitutional Court Justice Albie Sachs delivered the Robert P. Anderson Memorial Fellowship Lecture at Yale Law School on September 21, 2011. The lecture, titled “The Judge Who Cried: Social and Economic Rights as Judicially Enforceable Fundamental Rights.”

    • 2 sec
    Law and Morality in the Jewish Tradition

    Law and Morality in the Jewish Tradition

    Justice Izhak Englard, former justice of the Supreme Court of Israel, gives a Dean's Lecture at Yale Law School on "Law and Morality in the Jewish Tradition."

    • 3 sec
    The Strange Alchemy of Life and Law

    The Strange Alchemy of Life and Law

    Albie Sachs, former South African Constitutional Justice discusses his life as an anti-apartheid activist, detainment in solitary confinement and subsequent exile. His new book is entitled "The Strange Alchemy of Life and Law".

    • 2 sec
    Taiwan's Developing Rule of Law and its Significance for China: 50 Years of Personal Experience

    Taiwan's Developing Rule of Law and its Significance for China: 50 Years of Personal Experience

    Part One - Jerome A. Cohen speaks about his personal experiences in East Asia and about the role of law and politics in China's development. He explains the significance between Taiwan and mainland China.

    • 4 sec
    Lawyering to Foster China's Economic and Legal Development

    Lawyering to Foster China's Economic and Legal Development

    Part Two of Three - Jerome A. Cohen speaks about his personal experiences in East Asia and about the role of law and politics in China's development. He explains the significance between Taiwan and mainland China.

    • 4 sec

Top Podcasts In Science

Something You Should Know
Mike Carruthers | OmniCast Media | Cumulus Podcast Network
All In The Mind
ABC listen
Amateur Psychology - Tay mơ học đời bằng Tâm lý học
Nguyen Doan Minh Thu
NASA's Curious Universe
National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Radiolab
WNYC Studios
Overheard at National Geographic
National Geographic

You Might Also Like

Law in Action
BBC Radio 4
Up First
NPR
The Daily
The New York Times
Cambridge Law: Public Lectures from the Faculty of Law
Cambridge University
International Law Behind the Headlines
American Society of International Law

More by Yale University

Psychology
Yale School of Medicine
Public Health
Yale School of Medicine
Game Theory - Video
Ben Polak
Inside the Yale Admissions Office
Inside the Yale Admissions Office
Physics
Yale University
Ecology
Yale School of Forestry