The New York Law School Journal of Human Rights was a publication dedicated to providing interdisciplinary scholarship in new and breaking areas of human rights law. The Journal was published between 1983 and 2003, when it combined forces with the NYLS Law Review.
Articles
A FOUL IMMIGRATION POLICY: U.S. MISINTERPRETATION OF THE NONREFOULEMENT OBLIGATION UNDER THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE
Samuel L. David
POST-CONFLICT RECONSTRUCTION: THE UNITED NATIONS' INVOLVEMENT IN AFGHANISTAN
Tanya Domenica Bosi
THE RISING NUMBER OF INTERNALLY-DISPLACED PERSONS IN COLOMBIA AND THE UNITED NATIONS' RESPONSE
Kelli Rose McGhee
AIDS 2002, BARCELONA
Meredith Renquin
CLASSIFYING THE KILLINGS IN SUDAN AS GENOCIDE
Lina Sapienza
TERROR REIGNS SUPREME AND THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE IS SEEMINGLY ENDLESS IN THE TRIPLE FRONTIER
Gregory Shapiro
RESOLVING AFRICA'S LONGEST CIVIL WAR: UPDATES ON THE CASE CONCERNING ARMED ACTIVITIES IN THE DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF CONGO
John R. Tatulli
WORLD WAR II COMFORT WOMEN: JAPAN'S SEX SLAVES OR HIRED PROSTITUTES?
Christine Wawrynek
TAYLOR'S LIBERIA AND THE U.N.'s INVOLVEMENT
Levi Woodward