All Posts Tagged With: "Guantanamo Bay"

The Great Writ Then and Now

The Great Writ Then and Now by Wendy McElroy Wendy McElroy (wendy@wendymcelroy.com) is an author, the editor of ifeminists.com, and a research fellow for the Independent Institute in Oakland, California. Habeas corpus is a rarely invoked legal writ, or document, widely considered to be the cornerstone of individual liberty. Also known as The Great Writ, [...]

23Oct2009 | Wendy McElroy | 1 comment | Continued

The “Stable Bulwark of Our Liberties”

The U.S. Supreme Court in June struck a blow for the separation of powers and dealt the Bush administration a big setback by ruling that suspects held without charge at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, have the right to contest their imprisonment under the doctrine of habeas corpus. Simply put, the Court held that the government may [...]

1Sep2008 | Sheldon Richman | 5 comments | Continued

We Win One (So Far)

May the government declare a U.S. resident an “enemy combatant,” throw him in a military prison indefinitely, and never charge him with a crime—all without judicial review? The Bush administration says yes. But in a key ruling in June, the same week as the 792nd anniversary of Magna Carta, a three-judge panel of the U.S. [...]

1Sep2007 | Sheldon Richman | 0 comments | Continued
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