
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Should the U.S. Supreme Court be the court of the world? In the 18th century, two feuding Frenchmen inspired a one-sentence law that helped launch American human rights litigation into the 20th century. The Alien Tort Statute allowed a Paraguayan woman to find justice for a terrible crime committed in her homeland. But as America reached further and further out into the world, the court was forced to confront the contradictions in our country’s ideology: sympathy vs. sovereignty. Earlier this month, the Supreme Court heard arguments in Jesner v. Arab Bank, a case that could reshape the way America responds to human rights abuses abroad. Does the A.T.S. secure human rights or is it a dangerous overreach?
4.8
1441314,413 ratings
Should the U.S. Supreme Court be the court of the world? In the 18th century, two feuding Frenchmen inspired a one-sentence law that helped launch American human rights litigation into the 20th century. The Alien Tort Statute allowed a Paraguayan woman to find justice for a terrible crime committed in her homeland. But as America reached further and further out into the world, the court was forced to confront the contradictions in our country’s ideology: sympathy vs. sovereignty. Earlier this month, the Supreme Court heard arguments in Jesner v. Arab Bank, a case that could reshape the way America responds to human rights abuses abroad. Does the A.T.S. secure human rights or is it a dangerous overreach?
9,163 Listeners
38,689 Listeners
43,969 Listeners
90,949 Listeners
38,189 Listeners
6,845 Listeners
32,291 Listeners
26,162 Listeners
21,657 Listeners
43,483 Listeners
12,026 Listeners
59,322 Listeners
3,974 Listeners
5,774 Listeners
16,043 Listeners
381 Listeners
3,346 Listeners
153 Listeners
5,687 Listeners
16,352 Listeners
2,261 Listeners
302 Listeners
1,049 Listeners
2,827 Listeners
1,032 Listeners