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  • Issue 2
  • 2025
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Establishing a "Duty to Not Destroy": Using Fiduciary Duty to Hold Settler-Colonial States Responsible for Cultural and Linguistic Harms Committed Against Indigenous Students at Government-Run Boarding Schools

  • Kristina McLaughlin
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In This Issue

International Abolitionist Advocacy: The Rise of Global Networks to Advance Human Rights and the Promise of the Worldwise Campaign to Abolish Capital Punishment

Competition in the Global Law Market: Offshore Development of the Statutory "Rule in Hastings-Bass"

Human rights and Foreign Policy: South Africa's Genocide Complaint Against Israel at the International Court of Justice

Revival of Industrial Policy Implications for International Trade Law

Establishing a "Duty to Not Destroy": Using Fiduciary Duty to Hold Settler-Colonial States Responsible for Cultural and Linguistic Harms Committed Against Indigenous Students at Government-Run Boarding Schools

And They Would Have Gotten Away with It, If Not for Those Meddling Federales: Examining State Responses to Transnational Organized Crime and Developing a Policy Framework

The End of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal: Its Success and Legacy

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