Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Three-County & Full Pass also available
- Posted September 04, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Discussion to focus on banning Sharia, other foreign laws in U.S. courts

Wayne State University Law School experts will tackle questions related to the application of foreign or international law during the panel discussion "Keeping Foreign Law Out of State Courts: The Movement to Ban Sharia and Other International and Foreign Laws," at 12:15 p.m. Tuesday, Sept. 11, in the Spencer M. Partrich Auditorium at Wayne Law.
Among the questions to be considered:
* When states pass laws banning the application of foreign or international law, including Sharia, the religious law of Islam, are they infringing on the religious freedom of Muslims?
* How do such laws affect commercial contracts that are explicitly governed by the laws of another country?
* Do states passing such laws infringe on the foreign policy-making powers of the federal government?
Speakers include Associate Professor Paul Dubinsky whose scholarship focuses on the role of domestic courts in transnational dispute resolution including private international law's intersection with human rights law and with national security law; Assistant Professor Justin Long who teaches civil procedure and state constitutionalism; Assistant Professor Christopher Lund whose academic interest is religious liberty; and Professor Jonathan Weinberg, an expert on immigration and citizenship law.
The event is free, open to the public and includes lunch. It is the first presentation in the fall lecture series sponsored by the Wayne Law Program for International Legal Studies.
Visit law.wayne.edu/internationalstudies for additional information on the Program for International Legal Studies.
Published: Tue, Sep 4, 2012
headlines Oakland County
headlines National
- Summit offered research-based roadmap for law firms seeking to implement generative AI
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Former Wisconsin Supreme Court justice agrees to license suspension for alleged election-review misconduct
- ‘Stay out of my shorts,’ other discourteous comments led to censure for New York judge
- Federal judge’s Columbia clerk boycott didn’t harm public confidence in judiciary, judicial council rules
- ‘There is no question that we will fight,’ says latest law firm targeted in Trump executive order