Money Defeats Human Rights at the FIFA World Cup

By Randa Zammam Football is the most popular sport in the United States, with the Super Bowl attracting its record viewership of over 208 million fans.[1]  Compare that to the other football—the game Americans call soccer—which amassed over… Read More

The Theft of Ideas on the International Stage

By Mitchell Perez  When one typically thinks about theft, it almost always involves a material component. In other words, people tend to see theft as the process of taking something one can touch or see. However, what does… Read More

How The United States is Outcompeting Canada on the Road to Paris

By Grant Knepper The Paris Agreement is the single largest international treaty related to environmental emissions of its kind.1 The agreement is an international treaty that calls on countries to submit a Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) every five… Read More

From Kota Kinabalu to Caracas: How One Conspiracy United Domestic, Military, and International Law and What It Means for U.S. Global Security

By: Katherine Owens The bribery and fraud conspiracy between a Malaysian businessman and senior U.S Navy officials known as the “Fat Leonard” scandal has become a tangle of federal investigations, military justice, international law, and U.S. global security,… Read More

How Britain’s Prime Minister, Liz Truss, Provided Her Own Downfall Through Her Economic Agenda

Mary Ray Prime Minister Liz Truss only held her office for about six weeks and during that short time, her misguided economic policies provoked blowback which ultimately pushed her to resign. Truss was the leader of the Conservative… Read More