University of Wisconsin–Madison

Month: June 2025

Kapinga (1992), “The Legal Profession and Social Action in the Third World: Reflections on Tanzania and Kenya”

The legal professions in Tanzania and Kenya, despite operating under repressive state control, have played a crucial activist role in challenging authoritarianism—unlike their more individualistic counterparts in the West.

Judge orders El Salvador human rights lawyer jailed for 6 months pending trial

A judge in El Salvador has ordered Ruth Leonora López, a prominent human rights and anti-corruption lawyer, to be jailed for six months pending trial on charges of illegal enrichment. López, head of the Anti-Corruption Unit at Cristosal, has been a vocal critic of President Nayib Bukele’s emergency powers and alleged government corruption. Her arrest …

Trump’s big problems with big law

President Trump has issued executive orders aimed at restricting certain law firms that have challenged his administration or represented controversial clients. Some firms have settled, while others are fighting back in court. The NPR Politics Podcast highlights how these orders—some already struck down—raise serious legal questions about executive overreach and the weaponization of government power …

Mexico Holds First-Ever Judicial Elections Amid Rule of Law Concerns

On June 1, 2025, Mexico held its first national judicial elections, a sweeping reform led by former President Andrés Manuel López Obrador and current President Claudia Sheinbaum. Voters selected 2,600 judges and magistrates, including all nine Supreme Court justices, in an unprecedented move aimed at combating judicial corruption and increasing public accountability. However, the election …