2009 Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition Winners

musical_notessvgEvery year, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) sponsors the Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition, named after the lawyer who founded ASCAP in 1914. The competition awards prizes at accredited law schools across the country for the best one or two papers in any area of copyright law at that law school. I am very pleased to announce this year’s winners of the competition at Marquette:

  • First Prize: William K. Pridemore II, Foul Ball! Why the Digital Millennium Copyright Act Strikes Out on Fair Use
  • Second Prize: Kevin P. Rizzuto, Just Say No (to Injunctions Enjoining Future Sale or Lease of Copyrighted Residential Homes)

First prize carries with it an award of $600, and second prize is awarded $250. Congratulations to Will and Kevin!

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He Gave Me A “B”

archibaldcoxAs my students in Constitutional Law are well aware, my Con Law professor in law school was Archibald Cox.  If you doubt me, you can look it up on his Wikipedia entry, where someone saw fit to memorialize that fact.  No one ever bothered to ask me what grade I received.  At this time of the year, when many of my students are coming by my office to discuss their final grade, it may be comforting for some to learn that Professor Cox gave me a “B.”  I still think that he undervalued my class participation.

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Outlawing Amnesty: The Return of Criminal Justice in Transitional Justice Schemes

Until recently, immunity measures like amnesties were considered an acceptable part of promoting transitional justice in countries seeking to address past episodes of systematic violations of human rights.  The politically sensitive context of countries seeking to broker peace between oppositional forces often outweighed the moral imperative of punishing those responsible for perpetrating human rights atrocities.  Latin America exemplified this trend in the 1980s, while also popularizing truth commissions.  The resulting truth v. justice debate eventually sidelined criminal trials in transitional justice schemes, accepting amnesty as lawful. However, growing international human rights and international criminal law jurisprudence began to slowly put in question the legality of amnesties.   Recognition of individual rights chipped away at absolute state sovereignty by building recognition of the state duty to investigate, prosecute, and punish those responsible for serious violations of human rights.  In addition, the end of the Cold War saw a new reliance on international and hybrid tribunals for criminal prosecutions, a remedy left largely dormant since the Nuremburg trials in 1945.  Jurisprudence emanating from these tribunals solidified the principle of individual criminal liability for egregious human rights violations, which previously was thought to trigger only liability based on the theory of the wrongful acts of states.

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