Hillary Clinton on Internet Freedoms

Hillary Clinton has some very interesting policy statements in recent times, if it comes to issues of religious freedom and freedom of expression, particularly in relation to how they are on the network, are expressed. In recent months she has been to associate to the Obama administration’s policy on Internet freedom, and to explain these diplomatic policy for the U.S. government. It seems that freedom of expression on the Internet is one of the international issues that other countries have on their agenda in which they interact with the U.S. added.

Clinton began responding to the 2009 Report on International Religious Freedom. In his speech, stressed that people remember the Clinton double values of both the American Bill of Rights and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights weds: religion and freedom of expression. It recognizes the people to practice their own religion or not practice as an absolute right. But Clinton also pointed out that my man should be allowed to criticize religion if they want, and no prohibition on their writings or censored. The people have every right to express their own criticism as well, even if they contain negative comments. Government involvement should be in the field of protection of individuals against discrimination and the achievement of minority religious groups.
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Human Rights Education

If all of the rights which are said to exist under the international human rights law project did actually exist, a global utopia would have come into existence. Human beings is the great and strongest animal in the world. Every one has right to live and right to speak.

Human beings developed in all the fields. It is very important to know what is Human Rights. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was drafted by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights chaired by, then first lady, Eleanor Roosevelt. December 10th is now celebrated around the world as International Human Rights Day.There are now 188 member states in United Nations [Read more...]

Law Schools Fighting For Human Rights

As human rights violations occurring around the world remains, contact the Law Schools take up human rights clinics to the growing demand for human rights lawyers. The United States established institutions are not only working to strengthen their own communities, but also to students and teachers, organizations and professionals to strengthen these rights outside the United States to train work.

Although the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is the foundation of international human rights law, the Declaration itself is not legally binding. However, clinics civil rights training for lawyers to strengthen the enforcement of these rights and to comply with the agreement that many nation-states are signatories to increase.

If international law is a relatively new field, many law schools distinguish exceptional programs for aspiring lawyers and civil rights created by teachers. to focus on the Columbia Law School, Justice Clinic students and teachers about the cultural impact of the Cross of international law, and encourage students in pursuing the man and now fight for the rights of civilians.

The clinic focuses on the students with a range of different skills that are needed in the area. For example, teaches the students how clinical, research and investigative interviews, which are cases of human rights violations carried out. In contrast to many other areas of law, skills in the field are necessary to learn to recognize the human and civil rights violations in a number of different settings and how to give and share to the local organizations and lawyers perpetrators to justice.

Also at the clinic at Harvard Law School’s International Justice, students learn more about these rights by the news. Although the clinic is based in Cambridge, students traveling internationally on a regular basis to document the human and civil rights violations and promoting respect for international law.

Harvard program also provides students with links to dozens of organizations around the world seek to human and civil rights trial. The clinic offers to support research in the summer and winter and free support to dozens of countries where human rights violations occur on a large scale.

At the Yale Law School’s Lowenstein Human Rights Project enables students to pursue civil and human rights on a school. In this clinic work together small groups of students in the public interest and human rights NGOs, research, design advocacy, and organizing events that bring more attention to human and civil rights violations in the United States and abroad.

Stanford Law School’s International Human Rights Clinic is also working on learning in the classroom with experience in integrating. In recent years, Stanford has required that the students’ first course deals with the conflict between human rights and the International Civil Law, and U.S. actions in Guantanamo. This course is coupled with international travel to which students assist foreign universities to establish clinical human and civil rights of their own has. Last fall, the Stanford Human and Civil Rights Clinic also began free international coordination of doctors and psychologists provide the local health systems to deal with the train injuries in their own country.

While some universities have evolved from the civil society and human rights clinics, one of the most promising clinical was set last year, in August 2008. The Sanela Diana Jenkins International Justice Clinic at UCLA is a unique interdisciplinary program that will focus and momentum.

Created with a generous donation of 4 million worth of Diana Jenkins [] http://www.dianajenkins.co.uk/, a refugee from the Bosnian war in Sarajevo, offers the clinic students and teachers to create and implement new strategies for lobbying. By focusing on advocacy, the International Justice Clinic Jenkins hopes to teach lawyers how to draw national and international attention to human rights abuses by creating the necessary pressure on the United Nations to inspire, the rights and the enforcement of civil rights.

In honor of Diana Jenkins and the early schools, students and teachers spent their first year for war crimes committed in Bosnia and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.

As these clinical human rights continue to grow, their efforts will surely come to see in the coming years. People who already work profoundly influenced and organizations in the United States and abroad and to strengthen the enforcement of international law. In the fight against violations of human rights, these clinics are needed to educate future leaders and strengthening of international law in the world.