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Spindle Law Interviews: Linda Radzik

January 18th, 2012 by Laura Bergus

Linda RadzikProfessor Linda Radzik is the author of Making Amends: Atonement Morality, Law, and Politics, published by Oxford University Press in 2009.  She is an associate professor of philosophy at Texas A&M University and works on moral issues that arise in the aftermath of wrongdoing.  Professor Radzik is currently writing about “moral bystanders,” and the roles third parties to moral conflicts play in enforcing and promulgating norms.  She has also written about the ethics of forgiveness, criminal punishment and collective moral responsibility.

Professor Radzik obtained her PhD in philosophy from the University of Arizona in 1997. (more…)

Spindle Law Interviews: Edgar Cahn

January 4th, 2012 by Laura Bergus

Edgar CahnEdgar S. Cahn has co-founded a law school, created the Time Dollars project, founded and directs the Time Dollar Youth Court in Washington D.C., as well as having authored numerous scholarly works and, at the start of his career, worked for then U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy.

Together with his late wife Jean Camper Cahn, Professor Cahn founded the Antioch School of Law, the predecessor of the University of the District of Columbia’s – David A. Clarke School of Law, the first law school in the United States to educate law students primarily through clinical training in legal services to the poor. Together, the Cahns served as co-deans of the law school from 1971 to 1980.

In the 1980s, Professor Cahn began the Time Dollars project, a service credit program, that now has more than 70 communities with registered programs in the US and abroad.  In Washington, D.C., Professor Cahn founded and directs the Time Dollar Youth Court, in which teen juries judge cases of teens arrested for the first time for non-violent offenses. The Court hears approximately 800 cases per year. (more…)

Spindle Law Interviews: Olivier De Schutter

December 15th, 2011 by Laura Bergus

Olivier De Schutter has been the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food since May 2008. He currently is teaching human rights and EU law at Columbia University, as well as at the Catholic University of Louvain, and at the College of Europe (Natolin). Between 2002 and 2006, he chaired the EU Network of Independent Experts on Fundamental Rights, a high-level group of experts which advised the European Union institutions on fundamental rights issues. Since 2004, and until his appointment as the UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food, he was the General Secretary of the International Federation of Human Rights (FIDH) on the issue of globalization and human rights. (more…)