Mike Blevins
J.D. M.Div., LL.M. in Intercultural Human Rights (St.Thomas Law, FL)
Supervisors: Dr. Siegfried Wiessner
Supervisors: Dr. Siegfried Wiessner
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Papers by Mike Blevins
The legacy of Slavery and Jim Crow comes to play in a series of dramatic events in the heartland and beyond, and an ensemble of unforgettable characters are forced to choose between lies and truth, life and death, with implications for their futures, their relationships and for the the future of democracy in the United States.
• The laws against torture should be strengthened to prevent a repeat of past mistakes.
• The U.S. should not transfer detainees to countries where torture is likely to occur.
• The Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) should be required to publish its opinions and tell the public when it is issuing a classified opinion.
• Physicians should be required to report abuses to authorities.
• The Executive Branch should declassify evidence regarding abuse and torture of captives.
• “Congress should pass legislation that makes clear that acts of torture, war crimes, and crimes against humanity are not legitimate… under the National Security Act.”
• The state-secrets privilege should not be invoked to dismiss lawsuits by victims of torture.
• Congress should amend the Army Field Manual to eliminate Appendix M, and “[l]anguage prohibiting the use of stress positions and abnormal sleep manipulation that was removed in 2006 should be restored.”
• The International Committee of the Red Cross should always be granted access to all detainees.
• The United States should sign and ratify the International Convention for the Protection of All People from Enforced Disappearance.
• The “forced feeding of detainees at Guantanamo is an abuse and must end.”
• The prison at Guantanamo be closed by no later than the end of 2014.
In order to combat this egregious and growing threat to human dignity, the government leaders, scholars, expert practitioners and students present at the symposium on human trafficking held on the campus of St.Thomas University Law School on February 10, 2005, hosted by the Law School’s Graduate Program in Intercultural Human Rights and its INTERCULTURAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW REVIEW, shared their expertise, engaged in thorough, problem- and policy-oriented discussion and formulated the following set of consensus principles to recommend to decision-makers and practitioners around the world.
The legacy of Slavery and Jim Crow comes to play in a series of dramatic events in the heartland and beyond, and an ensemble of unforgettable characters are forced to choose between lies and truth, life and death, with implications for their futures, their relationships and for the the future of democracy in the United States.
• The laws against torture should be strengthened to prevent a repeat of past mistakes.
• The U.S. should not transfer detainees to countries where torture is likely to occur.
• The Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) should be required to publish its opinions and tell the public when it is issuing a classified opinion.
• Physicians should be required to report abuses to authorities.
• The Executive Branch should declassify evidence regarding abuse and torture of captives.
• “Congress should pass legislation that makes clear that acts of torture, war crimes, and crimes against humanity are not legitimate… under the National Security Act.”
• The state-secrets privilege should not be invoked to dismiss lawsuits by victims of torture.
• Congress should amend the Army Field Manual to eliminate Appendix M, and “[l]anguage prohibiting the use of stress positions and abnormal sleep manipulation that was removed in 2006 should be restored.”
• The International Committee of the Red Cross should always be granted access to all detainees.
• The United States should sign and ratify the International Convention for the Protection of All People from Enforced Disappearance.
• The “forced feeding of detainees at Guantanamo is an abuse and must end.”
• The prison at Guantanamo be closed by no later than the end of 2014.
In order to combat this egregious and growing threat to human dignity, the government leaders, scholars, expert practitioners and students present at the symposium on human trafficking held on the campus of St.Thomas University Law School on February 10, 2005, hosted by the Law School’s Graduate Program in Intercultural Human Rights and its INTERCULTURAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW REVIEW, shared their expertise, engaged in thorough, problem- and policy-oriented discussion and formulated the following set of consensus principles to recommend to decision-makers and practitioners around the world.