SCOTUSblog » Academic Round-up
- Montana asks justices to revive parental-consent law for minors to get an abortion
- Liability for undelivered mail and the chilling effect of subpoenas
- Limiting a defendant’s ability to confer with counsel during a murder trial
- Justices decline to hear post-conviction relief dispute in Missouri capital case
- In lawsuit originally filed by J.D. Vance, GOP asks court to overrule limit on campaign spending
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Egyptian Courts Assert Rule of Law
By denying the power of the army to renew martial law, and Egyptian administrative court today defended a key element of any legitimate government: an independent judiciary. This is very different from the "rule of law" many conservatives -- both here and in Egypt -- talk about, which emphasizes the value of the law in controlling individuals. Here, the courts are attempting to control the government's intrusion into the lives of individuals.
Labels:
dissent,
Egypt,
Islam,
justice,
law,
Middle East,
paradigm,
political discourse,
rule of law
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