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A cartoonist's attempt to defraud Dreamworks has backfired. He faces 25 years in prison after the U.S. government convicted him of wire fraud and perjury.
The post Fake ‘Kung Fu Panda’ Creator Convicted of Fraud, Faces Up To 25 Years in Prison appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
What does an indie artist do when America's second-largest department store won't stop stealing your work?
The post ‘Mucha Lucha’ Co-Creator Lili Chin Files Copyright Infringement Suit Against Kohl’s appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
By: Heather Saunders,
on 10/21/2016
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Many people watching UK television drama National Treasure will have made their minds up about the guilt or innocence of the protagonist well before the end of the series. In episode one we learn that this aging celebrity has ‘slept around’ throughout his long marriage but when an allegation of non-recent sexual assault is made he strenuously denies it.
The post What if they are innocent? Justice for people accused of sexual and child abuse appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Jerry Beck,
on 10/19/2016
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An effort to organize the artists at Burbank, California-based Stoopid Buddy Stoodios has gained momentum in recent weeks.
The post Exclusive: Artists At Stoopid Buddy, Studio Behind ‘Robot Chicken,’ Are Uniting To Unionize appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
Disney and its subsidiaries like Pixar and Lucasfilm are the only companies who are still fighting artists.
The post Dreamworks Offers $50 Million Settlement in Animation Wage-Theft Lawsuit appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
By: Begina Slawinska,
on 10/17/2016
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Civil society will be preoccupied in the years to come with ensuring the maintenance of environmental standards formerly set by EU environmental law. This blog provides some thoughts on the less visible aspects of EU environmental governance, aspects that must be held up to scrutiny as we develop an accountability framework ‘independent’ of the rules and institutions of the European Union.
The post Brexit: environmental accountability and EU governance appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Begina Slawinska,
on 10/10/2016
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I may not have understood the allure of capturing Pokémon (...) but I hope I am not so trenchant as to run around in the hope of spotting something even rarer; UK membership of the EU as it existed prior to 23 June 2016. That truly is becoming an alternate reality.
The post Alternate realities: Brexit and Pokémon appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Yasmin Coonjah,
on 10/3/2016
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Speaking before the Family Research Council, the Republican nominee for president, Donald Trump, called for a repeal of the “Johnson Amendment.” The Johnson Amendment is part of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, and prohibits tax-exempt organizations such as schools, hospitals, and churches from participating in political campaigns. The Republican Party’s 2016 platform echoes Mr. Trump.
The post Churches and politics: why the Johnson Amendment should be modified and not repealed appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Begina Slawinska,
on 10/3/2016
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UK air quality law now finds itself at a crossroads. Air quality law is a well-established area of environmental law, having been at the vanguard of much of it. It is a well-established area across multiple levels of governance, with local and national regulation in the UK operating against a backdrop of binding EU standards and an international law framework for transboundary air pollution
The post Air quality law in the United Kingdom at a crossroads appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Bethany Pamplin,
on 9/26/2016
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It’s easy to assume that only ‘evil’ people commit atrocity. And it’s equally easy to imagine the victims as ‘good’ or ‘innocent’. But the reality is far more complex. Many perpetrators are tragic. They may begin as victims. Victims, too, may victimize others. These victims are imperfect. Some victims survive – and some even thrive – because of harm they inflict.
The post A former child soldier prosecuted at the International Criminal Court appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Daisy Simonis,
on 9/22/2016
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On August 5, the Obama administration released a redacted version of its so-called “playbook” for making decisions about the capture or targeted killing of terrorists. Translated out of the bureaucratese: at least off the battlefield the President makes the final decision, personally, about the targeted killing of American citizens and permanent residents. Many people find this fact about the administration’s decisional process momentous. But is it?
The post The targeted killing of American citizens appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Fiona Parker,
on 9/20/2016
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What has long been standard market practice in many jurisdictions is becoming more and more mainstream in Germany, too: compensating counsel in arbitration cases on an hourly basis, and being entitled to have the defeated party pay for it.
The post Hourly rates becoming more and more mainstream in German arbitration appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Bethany Pamplin,
on 9/19/2016
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What are the narratives we can tell about the future of UK environmental law in light of the result of the UK EU referendum? Any answer is not just important for the UK, but will also directly shape our understanding of what nationhood means in an era of globalisation. That sounds a rather grandiose statement to make, but let us explain.
The post Beyond the binary: Brexit, environmental law, and an interconnected world appeared first on OUPblog.
By: DanP,
on 9/15/2016
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My research interests have for more than five decades been directly or obliquely related to the making and administration of laws, especially with regard to women, in colonial and independent India. Indeed, my first series of articles, which appeared in the early 1960s, was on social reform and legislation in 19th century India. A little later, while researching for my doctoral dissertation on early Indian nationalism, I got interested in the Maharaja Libel Case.
The post Law, gender equality, and social justice in India appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Daisy Simonis,
on 9/12/2016
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‘Vote leave, take control’ was the slogan of almost fiendish simplicity that helped win the Brexit referendum, masking the mendacity and absence of vision that underlay it. The impulses it captures—wresting sovereignty back from remote elites to Westminster, with its proud democratic tradition—echo those that have for years underpinned the opprobrium directed at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg in British public debate.
The post A democratic defence of the European Court of Human Rights appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Yasmin Coonjah,
on 9/5/2016
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Democratic Party platform for 2016 repudiates a major provision of Obamacare – but no one has said this out loud. In particular, the Democratic Party has now officially called for abolition of the “Cadillac tax,” the Obamacare levy designed to control health care costs by taxing expensive employer health plans. Tucked away on page 35 of the Democratic platform is this enigmatic sentence: We will repeal the excise tax on high-cost health insurance and find revenue to offset it because we need to contain the long-term growth of health care costs."
The post Why does the Democratic Party want the Cadillac tax abolished? appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Daisy Simonis,
on 9/5/2016
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In preparation for the European Society of International Law (ESIL) 12th Annual Conference, we asked some of our authors to reflect on this year’s conference theme ‘How International Law Works in Times of Crisis’. What are the major challenges facing the field, and is international law effective in addressing these issues? What role do international lawyers play in confronting crises, both old and new?
The post How does international law work in times of crisis? appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Jennifer Rod,
on 9/3/2016
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On this date in 1670: a trial gets underway. The two defendants had been arrested several weeks earlier while preaching to a crowd in the street, and charged with unlawful assembly and creating a riot. Their trial, slated to begin on 1 September, had been pushed back to 3 September after preliminary wrangling between the judge and the defendants. And so on this date – 246 years ago today – the defendants were called before the bench.
The post Two Williams go to trial: judges, juries, and liberty of conscience appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Heather Saunders,
on 8/31/2016
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The recently published ‘guidelines’ on police undercover operations prove to be just ‘business as usual’. The guidelines consist of 80 pages in which a new ‘alphabet soup’ of abbreviations describes each of a set of roles to be fulfilled by officers of given ranks.
The post Is undercover policing worth the risk? appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Fiona Parker,
on 8/30/2016
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The Leave vote in the EU referendum presents several potential challenges for employers which are of far more immediate and practical importance than speculation about the future direction of employment law in a post-EU environment.
The post Employment law: Post-Brexit appeared first on OUPblog.
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Monica Gupta,
on 8/26/2016
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(तस्वीर गूगल से साभार) मुस्लिम औरतें और बॉम्बे हाईकोर्ट का फैसला खुदा क्या वाकई लानत भेजता है मुस्लमान महिलाओ को दरगाह पर जाने से ??? कुछ दिनो पहले खबर पढी थी कि लखनऊ के ऐशबाग में ईदगाह में पहली बार महिलाओं ने पढ़ी नमाज!! ऐशबाग ईदगाह में पुरुषों के साथ तकरीबन पांच हजार महिलाएं शामिल […]
The post मुस्लिम औरतें और बॉम्बे हाईकोर्ट का फैसला appeared first on Monica Gupta.
By: Lisa Kramer,
on 8/26/2016
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And what is the best way to ensure an easy transition for offenders that are about to be released? Julian Roberts, author of Criminal Justice: A Very Short Introduction, tells us the top 10 things everyone should know about criminal justice, and what the chances and limitations of the Western system are.
The post 10 interesting facts about criminal justice appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Jerry Beck,
on 8/25/2016
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The new web site explains how artists will receive the nearly-$19 million settlement fund from Blue Sky and Sony Pictures.
The post New Web Site Helps Artists Claim Settlement Money From Wage Theft Lawsuit appeared first on Cartoon Brew.
By: Erica Albanese,
on 8/25/2016
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For some campaigners, the acid test of the effectiveness of a putative global arms trade treaty was whether it would prohibit or somehow legitimize the selling of arms to Saudi Arabia. Of course, those who expected a total prohibition on arms trading were always going to be deeply disappointed, but many of us felt it similarly unlikely that an international instrument would ever make it impossible for internally repressive regimes to procure weapons on the open market.
The post The Arms Trade Treaty and exports to Saudi Arabia: “Now is the summer of our discontent?” appeared first on OUPblog.
By: Alex Guyver,
on 8/24/2016
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A ‘kangaroo court’ is no more Australian than a Californian kangaroo rat. The term originated in the California of 1849, as a legacy of the summary and dubious efforts at informal justice on lawless gold fields. By contrast, the Australian gold fields of that period felt heavily the overbearing hand of the law. This contrast epitomes a larger paradox. Australians are seen as ‘disrespectful of authority’; the truth is they have, from their beginnings, been highly law-prone.
The post Australia in three words, part 2 – “Kangaroo court” appeared first on OUPblog.
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