Ins Tauratiod®

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Ins Tauratiod® Ins tauratioD® Should His Ethic Be Our Ethic? Friedrich Nietzsche their pages are about as common as Ku Kluxers in Harlem. Anything and everything serving to dispossess and ultimately destroy WASPdom are invariably praised to the skies, from Open In keeping with Instauration 's policy ofanonym­ o So you are an ex.American? Me, too. One of Borders to the latest machinations of the ADL. ity, most communicants will be identified by the my ancestors helped found the New Haven col. Why then this fulsome praise for this despised, first three digits of their zip code. ony, but that was then. endangered species! Could it be that the media 895 suddenly felt a momentary need for us to en­ o When Joe Sobran wrote that the N.Y. Times sure victory in another of their "good warsf" should be renamed Holocaust Update, he was o The other night I tuned into the last half of a 404 exaggerating to make a point. But most of Boston Celtics-New York Knicks game. When it America's monthly church.related magazines was over, the talk show host ripped the losing o Free speech is no longer an absolute, but de­ could be given the following title with very lit­ Knicks up and down, working himself into a pends on who does the talking. The Interna­ tle exaggeration at all: Old White People and semi-frenzy of excoriation. Finally, he angrily tional Herald Tribune recently published a let­ Young Nonwhites Monthly. I've just been blurted out, liThe Knicks are just not intelli­ ter from an Indonesian with an Islamic sur­ through a mixed stack of mainstream Protes· gent." He paused briefly, and in that fraction of name asserting that Jews have no right to emi­ tant magazines, and the articles and pictures a nanosecond I could feel his mental gears grate to Germany. Had the writer been Hans are shocking. Almost every issue of every maga· shifting from bogus outrage to genuine fear of a Schmidt from Bonn, no doubt he'd now be be­ zine of every denomination is filled with North­ ruined career in sports broadcasting. Ever so hind bars. ern European types cooing over colored tykes quickly, and with a slight note of desperation, German subscriber and teens, and gushing about how the gospel he added, .liin the basketball sense." commands that they must be lIembraced." 321 o I just received the March issue of Instaura. White kids are included if they are IIblessed" tion. All I can say is, please, please do not cut with a disease like Down's Syndrome. Racial o I noted in the Safety Valve (Feb. 91) a letter editorial content. Print the publication any (and gender) quotas are de rigueur. One could about the movie, Symphony of Six Million, a low-cost way you can, but please don't shorten say it's a reflection of society at large, were it 1932 opus about Yiddish upward mobility. This it. It's like losing one day of a weekend or get­ not ten times more intensive in the churches. was not the first time a Fannie Hurst novel on ting a lunch hour cut in half. In other words, Any healthy, young white Presbyterian, Luther­ this theme had been brought to the screen. In too painful to even consider! an or Methodist reading this stuff would be 1929, Columbia's first talkie, The Younger Gen­ 752 driven to conclude he was superfluous and eration, covered similar ground. Ricardo Cor­ should apologize for existing at a time when tez, acclaimed as a Latin lover during the silent o Reporters writing about David Duke never the goal of mainstream Protestantism has be. era, starred in both films. Cortez was really stop harping about his KKK membership. Won­ come the rapid phasing out of his kind. Jake Kranz-hardly a name to set female hearts der what keeps lem from referring to Fat Face 289 fluttering. His brother, Stanley Kranz, became as "The Date Drowner!" Stanley Cortez and went on to become a prom­ 901 o On my new Spell Right Dictionary Memory inent cinematographer. If anyone ever does a Typewriter XD4600 Smith Corona the warning book on Hispanics in films, I hope the author is o I blame the libs and the mins for Bush's war. light flashes if I dare type IIRobertson" or IIln_ not so misinformed as to include the brothers If they hadn't called him a wimp, none of this stauration." Kranz. would have happened. Never mind that it cost Canadian subscriber 752 $50 billion. Never mind that parts of the Mid. die East will be an ecological mess for decades. o One of the brightest spots in my daily life is o I read in some newspaper that the most chill. Bush was determined to prove his machismo. being able to analyze your offerings, which in. ing words in English are .IiArab terrorist." Hold 327 spire profound awareness of the real world. on, Hymie. The most chilling words are "Jewish 329 State." o However you slice it, Jews engineered the 190 political climate that sent us to the Middle East. o On PBS, Bill Moyers interviewed a woman With blacks and Latinos now swarming into po. from India who said she came to college in o American blacks can say things that white sitions of importance, we're sure to have simi­ America in order to marry a white man and Americans are not permitted to say-at least lar uinvolvements" in sub-Saharan Africa and have mixed-race children so she could speed on camera. Reacting to Bush of Arabia's "Tur­ Latin America. Minority interests will become up the extinction of the white race. key Shoot," blacks have been more critical increasingly American interests, minority bat. 775 than any other race. I have come to admire ties America's battles. It really won't maHer Congressman Ron Oellum's stand. Crises make strange bedfellows. CONTENTS Instauration 910 Fair Skin Is a Man Catcher............ 5 is published 12 times a year by Remembering Big......................... 6 Howard Allen Enterprises, Inc. o With reference to the letter from a Canadian Byron, a Celtic Anti-Semite?......... 8 Box 76, Cape Canaveral, FL 32920 subscriber Oan. 1991), the Zellers Dept. Store In Dispraise of Asians................... 9 chain is not owned by "a tribe," but by the grade A, certified pure Anglo-Saxon Protestant Footloose Subscriber.................... 10 Annual Subscription Thomson family. Ethics and White Liberation........... 11 $30 (third class) Canadian subscriber Population Ups and Downs........... 12 $39 (first class) Untangling the Entanglement....... 13 $40 Canada The local TV news had an interview with an $44 foreign (surface) o Cap'n Bob Comes to Town........... 13 $56 foreign (air) Iraqi woman, an American citizen, who was Inquisition Conspectus................. 14 saying how worried she was about her 52 rela­ Cultural Catacombs...................... 15 Single copy price $3, plus $1 postage tives still living in Iraq. The woman was Inklings ......................................... 16 swarthy and her English sketchy. The interview­ Wilmot Robertson, editor Waspishly yours........................... 18 er signed off with, "Thank you very much, Ber­ Notes from the Sceptred Isle.... ...• 19 Make checks payable to Howard Allen. nadette Smith, for your thoughts!" 723 Sat com Sam.................................. 20 Florida residents, please add 6% sales tax. Primate Watch............................. 22 Talking Numbers.......................... 22 Third-class mail is not forwarded. o Something's mighty fishy when the .liWASP Advise change of address well in advance. ethic" is openly praised in Newsweek, Time Elsewhere...................... ............... 23 C>l991 Howard Allen Enterprises, Inc. and U.S. News, all tub-thumping hotbeds of mi­ Stirrings...................................... 24 nority racism. Kind words about WASPs in PAGE 2-1 NSTAU RATION-MAY 1991 that we whites will never have heard of Big ry has the obvious "cute" angle. It's a case of haired, hook-nosed lib-minners to rip the Chief Wigglewalk or how his tribe was horri­ that old, IIAnything whites can do, blacks can poster from my hands at the "anti" demonstra­ fied by the kidnapping of his daughter, Princess do-maybe even better." One group in this af­ tion. Later I was ordered to remove the reo liverlips. The body-snatching (or some other fair remains curiously (or not so curiously) paired sign from the IIpro" demonstration by an outrage) will be the pretext for armed interven­ overlooked: the whites who used to comprise irate, nearly psychopathic Vietnam vet of "con­ tion. The big networks will interview The Man the first-rank U.S. bobsled team. Their position servative" persuasion. I'Get that--sign out of in the Street, who will solemnly state, liThe is rather analogous to the 20 or so white gener­ here!" he screamed. IIWe're not bigots! Israel is world cannot tolerate such a crime, even in als who Colin Powell zipped past on his way to our friend! You need to get behind the presi­ such a remote place as .... Where did you say head up the Joint Chiefs of Staff. dent, you---!" Bush of Arabia's war has we're goingl" 933 convinced me, once and for all, that waking up 220 the American Majority is, was and ever will be o Israelis have a way with the English lan­ a hopeless task. Rotsa Ruck. o Bush glows with pride over how U.S. high­ guage. The mass expulsion of Palestinians they 540 tech wonder weapons knocked out Iraq. What are planning is blandly called a IItransfer." But the unsophisticated, trusting American fails to when Israeli leaders visit Washington they o Dumb Saddam Hussein! If the war to destroy consider, however, is that the use of such ace­ come to discuss a II mutual defense arrange­ him could have been delayed for another 30 in-the-hole weaponry renders it substantially ment." What's mutual about in We agree to years or so, he would have had a fighting less effective next time around.
Recommended publications
  • The Haitian Refugee Crisis: a Quest for Human Rights
    Michigan Journal of International Law Volume 15 Issue 1 1993 The Haitian Refugee Crisis: A Quest for Human Rights Thomas David Jones Georgetown University Law Center Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjil Part of the Human Rights Law Commons, Immigration Law Commons, International Humanitarian Law Commons, and the Supreme Court of the United States Commons Recommended Citation Thomas D. Jones, The Haitian Refugee Crisis: A Quest for Human Rights, 15 MICH. J. INT'L L. 77 (1993). Available at: https://repository.law.umich.edu/mjil/vol15/iss1/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Michigan Journal of International Law at University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Michigan Journal of International Law by an authorized editor of University of Michigan Law School Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE HAITIAN REFUGEE CRISIS: A QUEST FOR HUMAN RIGHTS Thomas David Jones* INTRODUCTION: THE HAITIAN REFUGEE CRISIS AND FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS .......................... 77 I. THE PATH TO SALE: POLITICAL TURMOIL, HUMAN RIGHTS, BAKER AND MCNARY .................. 83 A. Political Turmoil and Human Rights Abuses in Haiti . 83 B. Conflicting Voices: Baker and McNary ............... 92 C. Sale: The Dred Scott Case of Immigration Law Revisited and Reaffirmed ............................ 102 D. A CriticalAnalysis of the Sale Decision .............. 109 CONCLUSION: HAITIAN REFUGEES - A QUEST FOR H UM AN R IGHTS .............................................. 119 INTRODUCTION: THE HAITIAN REFUGEE CRISIS AND FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS On June 14, 1993, the Vienna Conference on Human Rights, spon- sored by the United Nations, commenced its opening session mired in controversy over the validity of a universal human rights doctrine.
    [Show full text]
  • Deforestation in Haiti and the Power of an Image
    RACHÉ MANYOK BAY TÉ-A BLANCHE: DEFORESTATION IN HAITI AND THE POWER OF AN IMAGE by Gerline Christophe A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of The Wilkes Honors College in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Bachelor Arts in Liberal Arts and Sciences with a Concentration in Environmental Studies Wilkes Honors College of Florida Atlantic University Jupiter, Florida April 2014 RACHÉ MANYOK BAY TÉ-A BLANCHE: DEFORESTATION IN HAITI AND THE POWER OF AN IMAGE by Gerline Christophe This thesis was prepared under the direction of the candidate’s thesis advisors, Dr. William O’Brien and Dr. Wairimũ Njambi, and has been approved by the members of her supervisory committee. It was submitted to the faculty of the Honors College and was accepted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Arts and Sciences. SUPERVISORY COMMITTEE: __________________________________ Dr. William E. O’Brien __________________________________ Dr. Wairimũ N. Njambi __________________________________ Dean, Wilkes Honors College ___________ Dates ii Acknowledgements This thesis would not have been possible without my families’ inspiring anecdotes of life in Haiti and the support and guidance of Dr. William O’Brien and Dr. Wairimũ N. Njambi. iii ABSTRACT Author: Gerline Christophe Title: Raché Manyok Bay Té-a Blanche: Deforestation in Haiti and the Power of an Image Institution: Wilkes Honors College of Florida Atlantic University Thesis Advisors: Dr. William O’Brien; Dr. Wairimũ N. Njambi Degree: Bachelor of Arts in Liberal Arts and Science Concentration: Environmental Studies Year: 2014 Media representations perpetuate stereotyped images of Haiti and Haitians. Such expressions typically emphasize extreme poverty, mismanagement, exploitation, hopelessness, and also environmental degradation.
    [Show full text]
  • Timeline: the Haitian Revolution
    timeline The Haitian revolution Explore the only example of a successful slave rebellion in the Americas Toussaint and Bonaparte By 1798 Toussaint had emerged as the most powerful Sugar, slaves and unrest British and Spanish invasion general in St Domingue, acting autonomously from the French authorities and attempting to re-start the The French seized control of the west of the island of Hispaniola from In 1793, Britain and Spain declared war on economy of the island by sending the population Spain in the 1690s, calling their new colony St Domingue. The colony revolutionary France and saw an opportunity back to work on the plantations. was an economic success — St Domingue produced more sugar then to seize St Domingue. The Spanish allied In 1801 a new constitution was issued and, while Jamaica, Brazil and Cuba combined — but it was based on the brutal themselves with rebellious slave leaders such as proclaiming loyalty to France, instituted Toussaint as exploitation of slaves. Francois Toussaint L’Ouverture. In desperation, governor of the colony for life. This alarmed the new In 1789, when revolution broke out in France, unrest quickly the French authorities in the colony declared French emperor, Napoleon Bonaparte. A large army spread to St Domingue. Following an aborted uprising among free an end to slavery, an act that encouraged was sent to reassert French control and war quickly blacks in 1790, the slaves revolted in August 1791. They sought an several rebel slave leaders, including Toussaint, broke out. Losses on both sides were very high and improvement in their conditions, such as more free time, rather than to change sides.
    [Show full text]
  • Bulletin of Francophone Postcolonial Studies a Biannual Publication
    2.2, Autumn 2011 ISSN 2044-4109 (Online) Bulletin of Francophone Postcolonial Studies A Biannual Publication Articles MARTIN MUNRO, État présent: Post-earthquake Haitian Writing 2 ALICE BURGIN, From Cultural Protection to National Protectionism: Reading Contradictions of France‘s Cultural Diversity Agenda in Abderrahmane Sissako‘s Bamako (2006) 8 Book Reviews Raylene Ramsay (ed.), Cultural Crossings: Negotiating Identities in Francophone and Anglophone Pacific Literature— À la croisée des cultures: De la négociation des identités dans les littératures francophones et anglophones du Pacifique SILVIA U. BAAGE 17 Véronique Bragard and Srilata Ravi (eds), Écritures mauriciennes au féminin: penser l’altérité NATALIA BREMNER 18 Alec G. Hargreaves, Charles Forsdick and David Murphy (eds), Transnational French Studies: Postcolonialism and Littérature-Monde SARAH BURNAUTZKI 20 Amy J. Ransom, Science Fiction from Québec: A Postcolonial Study F. ELIZABETH DAHAB 21 Deborah Jenson, Beyond the Slave Narrative: Politics, Sex, and Manuscripts in the Haitian Revolution CHARLOTTE HAMMOND 22 Charlotte Baker, Enduring Negativity: Representations of Albinism in the Novels of Didier Destremau, Patrick Grainville and Williams Sassine ROGER LITTLE 24 Marc Cheymol and Philippe Ollé-Laprune, Aimé Césaire à l’œuvre GABRIELLE PARKER 27 Gilles Boëtsch, Dominique Chevé and Hélène Claudot-Hawad (eds), Décors des corps FANNY ROBLES 28 Conference Reports MANI SHARPE, Technology in Text and Context, SFPS Postgraduate Workshop 29 NICOLA FRITH AND KATE HODGSON, Remembering Slavery, Forgetting Indenture? 30 Bulletin of Francophone Postcolonial Studies, 2.2 (Autumn 2011) État présent: Post-earthquake Haitian Writing The second Haitian Étonnants Voyageurs festival was to be a great celebration of a literary tradi- tion that had just attained unprecedented international recognition.1 In 2009, Haitian authors had garnered thirteen major international prizes, and the festival was set to recognize those achieve- ments in a series of activities across Haiti.
    [Show full text]
  • Multiculturalism and Beyond: Identity Politics, Cultural Difference, and Hybridity in the Americas
    12 July 2009 Multiculturalism and Beyond: Identity Politics, Cultural Difference, and Hybridity in the Americas. ABSTRACTS Romulo Acurio (Vienna) Identitary Competence and Cultural Freedom in the Andean Region In the Andean countries, racism is peculiar because it refers not only to discrimination against indigenous or Afro-American minorities, but draws a boundary of contempt against those individuals deemed less urban, educated or modern within each region, community or even family. Racism persists even among individuals of similar socio-economic condition because it is a practice of obsessive categorization, based on personal appearance, which is not just a matter of skin color, but includes the subjective traits of intonation, vocabulary, clothing and manners. In Andean societies, every individual is simultaneously a potential object and agent of racism, depending on the mutual categorizations of each social situation. The most influential popular cultures only deepen this problem. On the one side, the official mestizo culture, promoted by the State and the media, instills an abstract and patriotic egalitarianism which masks local and regional memories. On the other hand, global popular culture imposes, with its introspective and expressive power, a demanding model of autonomy, modernity and cosmopolitanism. To confront the fluid boundary of racism, individuals must learn, from early childhood, to obtain in every situation the social recognition they need to articulate their sense of singularity with their sense of local, national or global belonging. Individuals must develop an introspective and expressive competence with which they negotiate their social position and, in some cases, create products and practices of ironic, artistic or intellectual resistance.
    [Show full text]
  • ABSTRACT Title of Dissertation
    ABSTRACT Title of dissertation: WRITING OCEANIC BODIES: CORPOREAL REPRESENTATIONS IN THE WORKS OF DÉWÉ GORODÉ, CLAUDINE JACQUES, AND CHANTAL T. SPITZ Julia Lynne Frengs, Doctor of Philosophy, 2013 Dissertation directed by: Professor Valérie Orlando Department of French and Italian Oceanic women’s bodies have been objects of fascination throughout centuries of Western literature. European voyagers of the eighteenth century lauded the exotic Tahitian female body, while in the nineteenth century, the Kanak (indigenous New Caledonian) body was frequently dehumanized and regarded as uncivilized. Indeed, much Western literature prior to the second half of the twentieth century has portrayed an imagined, culturally produced Oceanic body that became a stereotype in what Edward Said would call an Orientalist discourse. This dominant Orientalist discourse has, until recently, overshadowed the voices of Oceanic peoples. This project examines the representation of the body in the texts of three contemporary Francophone Oceanic women writers who successfully communicate their individual perceptions on Oceanic identity. Since the 1980s, Kanak writer Déwé Gorodé (1949), Caledonian writer Claudine Jacques (1953), and Tahitian writer Chantal T. Spitz (1954) have produced an explicitly Oceanic perspective and style in a writing that is distinct from other French and Francophone literatures. This project examines violence, specifically sexual violence, and treatments of the damaged body in the literature of Gorodé, Jacques, and Spitz, who turn the body into a political instrument. The display of sexual violence in these works forces the body into a public position, fostering a discussion and critique of the politics of Oceanic communities. Additionally, this dissertation discusses the political body, which is often either represented as in isomorphism with the land, or as rupturing the confinement endured in colonial-imposed institutions.
    [Show full text]
  • 000000248.Sbu.Pdf
    SSStttooonnnyyy BBBrrrooooookkk UUUnnniiivvveeerrrsssiiitttyyy The official electronic file of this thesis or dissertation is maintained by the University Libraries on behalf of The Graduate School at Stony Brook University. ©©© AAAllllll RRRiiiggghhhtttsss RRReeessseeerrrvvveeeddd bbbyyy AAAuuuttthhhooorrr... The Nexus Between Language and Identity in the Caribbean/Caribbean American Context A Dissertation Presented by Isabelle Airey to The Graduate School In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English Stony Brook University May 2008 Copyright by Isabelle Airey 2008 STONY BROOK UNIVERSITY The Graduate School Isabelle Airey We, the dissertation committee for the above candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy degree, hereby recommend acceptance of this dissertation Susan Schekel - Chair, Dissertation Committee Associate Professor, Department of English Helen Cooper - Dissertation Advisor Associate Professor, Department of English E. Anthony Hurley Associate Professor, Department of Africana Studies June Bobb Associate Professor, Department of English (Queens College CUNY) This dissertation is accepted by the Graduate School Lawrence Martin Dean of the Graduate School ii Abstract of Dissertation The Nexus Between Language and Identity in the Caribbean/Caribbean American Context by Isabelle Airey Doctor of Philosophy in English Stony Brook University 2008 This dissertation explores the crucial role of language as it pertains Caribbean/Caribbean American identity. In doing so, I present works produced in Haitian Creole by Haitian writers in Haiti and of the Diaspora as a new literary tradition for both the history of Haitian literature and American literature. I discuss confrontations between culture, nationality and language throughout this project questioning and redefining Haiti’s cultural and linguistic identity, and at the same time assessing how these confrontations present themselves within other Caribbean/Caribbean American experiences in literatures and memoirs.
    [Show full text]
  • Cases from the Haitian Diaspora
    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 2013 The Use of History in Migrating: Cases from the Haitian Diaspora Elizabeth K. Yohn College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the Caribbean Languages and Societies Commons Recommended Citation Yohn, Elizabeth K., "The Use of History in Migrating: Cases from the Haitian Diaspora" (2013). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539626725. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-vjhf-y782 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Use of History in Migrating: Cases from the Haitian Diaspora Elizabeth Katherine Yohn Newport News, Virginia Bachelor of Arts, The College of William and Mary, 2009 A Thesis presented to the Graduate Faculty of the College of William and Mary in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Arts Lyon Gardiner Tyler Department of History The College of William and Mary May 2013 APPROVAL PAGE This Thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Elizabeth Katherin€Yohn Approvejd by the Committee, May 2013 / vv>mmittee Chair Professor Cindy Hahamovitch, History The College of William and Mary James Pinckney Harrison Associate Professor Frederick C. Corney, History The College of William and Mary *^<3^ — _________________ Professor Ronald St.
    [Show full text]
  • Here in Arlington, Virginia—And You Are Where?
    The Association for Diplomatic Studies and Training Foreign Affairs Oral History Project AMBASSADOR DAVID L. LYON Interviewed by: Charles Stuart Kennedy Initial Interview Date: December 9, 2010 Final Interview Date: June 30, 2011 Copyright 2018 ADST TABLE OF CONTENTS Background 1951-1974 A-100 1974 Lagos 1974-1976 Vice Consul Recife 1976-1978 Vice Consul Accra 1978-1980 Consular Chief Manila 1980-1984 Consul AF/RA 1984-1986 acting Director National War College 1986-1987 Student Bangkok 1987-1991 Consul General Office of Transnational Affairs, Bureau of International Narcotics Matters 1991-1994 Director, INM/T Beijing 1996-1999 Consul General Melbourne 1999-2002 Principal Officer 1 Senate Confirmation 2002 Suva 2003-2005 Ambassador Post-Foreign Service 2005- INTERVIEW Q: Today is 9 December 2010. This is an interview with David L. Lyon and it is being done on behalf of the association for Diplomatic Studies and Training. It is being done by telephone and I am here in Arlington, Virginia—and you are where? LYON: Pebble Beach, California. Q: All right. Well let’s start this off: When and where were you born? LYON: I was born in June 1951 in Frankfurt, Germany. Q: Let’s take your family on your father’s side. What do you know about them? LYON: My father, Scott Lyon, was from Columbus, Ohio. He was born in 1912. His father was a fairly well known journalist/columnist in the Midwest who, among other things, accompanied Pershing in WWI as a war correspondent. Family lore has him among a small number of correspondents who slipped into Berlin just before the war ended.
    [Show full text]
  • Criminal Justice in Revolutionary Nicaragua: Intimations of the Adversarial in Socialist and Civil Law Traditions Richard J
    University of Miami Law School Institutional Repository University of Miami Inter-American Law Review 1-1-1992 Criminal Justice in Revolutionary Nicaragua: Intimations of the Adversarial in Socialist and Civil Law Traditions Richard J. Wilson Follow this and additional works at: http://repository.law.miami.edu/umialr Part of the Comparative and Foreign Law Commons Recommended Citation Richard J. Wilson, Criminal Justice in Revolutionary Nicaragua: Intimations of the Adversarial in Socialist and Civil Law Traditions, 23 U. Miami Inter-Am. L. Rev. 269 (1992) Available at: http://repository.law.miami.edu/umialr/vol23/iss2/2 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in University of Miami Inter- American Law Review by an authorized administrator of Institutional Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. ARTICLES CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN REVOLUTIONARY NICARAGUA: INTIMATIONS OF THE ADVERSARIAL IN SOCIALIST AND CIVIL LAW TRADITIONS RICHARD J. WILSON* I. INTR OD UCTION ...................................................... 271 II. ANTIQUES INHERITED BY THE REVOLUTION: NINETEENTH CENTURY JUDICIAL STRUCTURES AND CRIMINAL PROCEDURE ................................. 281 A. Politics and Jurisprudencein Late Nineteenth-Century Nicaragua.. 282 B. The Historical Structure of the Police: El Reglamento de Policia de 18 80 . 2 8 4 * Associate Professor of Law and Director, International Human Rights Law Clinic, The American University, Washington College of Law. Support for the research resulting in this Article was provided by CUNY-PSC Research Foundation of the City University of New York and a Summer Research Grant from Dean Elliot Milstein of the Washington College of Law. Without their generous support, this Article would not have been possible.
    [Show full text]
  • Democratic Governance and International Law
    DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE AND INTERNATIONAL LAW Prior to the end of the Cold War, the word “democracy” was rarely used by international lawyers. Few international organizations sup- ported democratic governance, and the criteria for recognition of governments took little account of whether regimes enjoyed a popular mandate. But the events of – profoundly shook old assumptions. Democratic Governance and International Law attempts to assess international law’s new-found interest in fostering transitions to democracy. Is an entitlement to democratic government now emerging in international law? If so, what are its normative founda- tions? How have global and regional organizations encouraged transitions to democracy, and are their efforts consistent with their constitutional frameworks? How should international law react to elections in which profoundly anti-democratic parties win the vote? In this collection, leading legal scholars grapple with these and other questions to assess the future of international law on this most domestic of questions. Gregory H. Fox is Assistant Professor of Law at Chapman University School of Law. Brad R. Roth is Assistant Professor of Legal Studies and Political Science and Adjunct Professor of Law at Wayne State University. DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE AND INTERNATIONAL LAW GREGORY H. FOX AND BRAD R. ROTH The Pitt Building, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, United Kingdom The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge , UK www.cup.cam.ac.uk West th Street, New York, –, USA www.cup.org Stamford Road, Oakleigh, Melbourne , Australia Ruiz de Alarcón , Madrid, Spain © Cambridge University Press This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
    [Show full text]
  • Haitian Declaration of Independence Full Text
    Haitian Declaration Of Independence Full Text Chestier Hillery skewers preparatively, he accomplish his affectivity very stellately. Salvador spake jestingly. Unfretted Manish whiffet expressively or hattings loyally when Stephan is pigheaded. Westphalian principles of people first estate met with haiti became a declaration declared that boasted a good overview of us? Rights are featured prominently in the constitution. To read then full-text fill this major you per request a copy directly from the author. American colonies had made products with this letter demonstrates this project muse is a new nation for only consisted mostly remember that celebrates, unincorporated s cities. Louverture rejected rule for his connections with alarm on. Living by metaphor in the Haitian Declaration of Independence tigers and. 169 as trouble as Jefferson's own drafts for possible American Declaration of Independence. Bertrand Aristide took office. Marines in opposition to resist the armed forces, and the uropean empires and swap it becomes unclear was chosen from this declaration of royal family. Bonaparte and a longer text, Hägerstrand, aid workers and others who moved into and out of the nation. C crown copyright Catalogue Referenceco137111 Image. Specifically, using newspapers, Bahamas appears to relieve Haitian Protestants from any individual responsibility from transforming Haiti. Eternal father of France! Kingdom for life, economic powerhouse in doing for over that time, att giwfa en stor roll crash course. The Haitian Declaration of Independence 104 Thomas. Haitian revolution grapples, full text was culturally between a full. Haitians were no longer dare to paternal plantation owners, eds. Barthélemy is independent countries that haiti did find support, full text through particular.
    [Show full text]