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Dr. Osama Siddique
Interviews

Osama Siddique Interview, Part II

Harvard Human Rights Journal continues its conversation with Pakistani legal scholar Osama Siddique. This week, Professor Siddique discusses the role of mala fides in Pakistani blasphemy cases, and share his thoughts on the broader societal debate regarding the blasphemy laws. Part I of the interview is available HERE. Interviewer: James Tager, J.D. ‘13 Tell us […]

Dr. Osama Siddique
Interviews

Osama Siddique Interview, Part I

The Harvard Human Rights Journal is pleased to launch its interview-based initiative, featuring conversations with human rights academics and practitioners concerning a diverse set of human rights issues. Our first featured interview is with Osama Siddique, an Associate Professor at Lahore University of Management Sciences, recent S.J.D. graduate from Harvard Law, and Pakistani legal scholar.

Features, Online Journal

Corporate Accountability to Human Rights: The Case of the Gaza Strip

This article discusses the human rights obligations of corporations that operate in bilateral zones of conflict. It analyzes the commercial activity of Israeli corporations in the Palestinian Gaza Strip from within the framework of the evolving jurisprudence on the human rights obligations of corporations. In recent years, greater attention has been paid to the role

Features, Online Journal

Balancing Rights or Building Rights?

In 2007, after more than 20 years of exhaustive negotiations, drafts and re-drafts between indigenous groups and member states, the United Nations (“UN”) finally adopted the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (“Declaration”) by an overwhelming majority.

Features, Online Journal

A “Bilingual” Approach to Language Rights

This Article was born out of a question posed to me by my eight-year-old son, Leo, who has been raised as a bilingual speaker of Spanish and English. Leo’s question arose in response to a proposal to eliminate the brief weekly Spanish lesson provided to the children at his public elementary school in Austin, Texas.

Features

Litigating against the Forced Sterilization of HIV-Positive Women: Recent Developments in Chile and Namibia

Click here to read full article (pdf) In response to rising Human Immunodeficiency Virus (“HIV”)-infection rates, poverty, and overpopulation, some nations have resorted to a policy of forcibly sterilizing HIV-positive women in order to prevent the transmission of HIV during childbirth. Such forced sterilization violates a woman’s fundamental right to control her own body and

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