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Loyola Law School to Host Symposium on Litigating Genocide

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  • Loyola Law School to Host Symposium on Litigating Genocide

    February 23, 2009

    Loyola Law School to Host

    Symposium on Litigating Genocide

    International Law Scholars to Discuss Legal Aspects of Armenian Genocide

    LOS ANGELES - Loyola Law School will host a gathering of scholars and
    practitioners on all-day Friday, February 27, to discuss the challenges
    American lawyers face in litigating genocide and other mass human rights
    violations.

    The event, titled "Litigating Genocide: When, Where, and How" is organized
    by the Loyola International & Comparative Law Review and the Loyola Center
    for the Study of Law and Genocide. The event is sponsored by the law firm of
    Geragos & Geragos, APC.

    The three panels of the symposium will each address a different aspect of
    genocide litigation, ranging from questions on the validity of pursuing
    relief for historic human rights violations to an inside look at litigators'
    experiences in U.S. courts. The symposium will take a multi-disciplinary
    approach to the topic of genocide litigation and will consider litigation in
    context of different historical events.

    Registration information and additional details are found at:
    http://ilr.lls.edu/2009Symposium.htm.

    Loyola Law School alumni Mark Geragos '82 and Brian Kabateck '89 helped
    establish the Center for the Study of Law & Genocide with funds from a $20
    million settlement they secured against the New York Life Insurance Company
    for unpaid life insurance benefits in the wake of the Armenian genocide.

    The International & Comparative Law Review (ILR) is a student-run
    publication that produces three issues each academic year.

    Contact: Jeffrey Choi, Executive Symposium Editor, Loyola of the Int'l &
    Comp. Law Review,

    [email protected].
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