Law: Human Rights 
Essential
Declaration of the National Anti-Slavery Convention
By William Lloyd Garrison: "Every man has a right to his own body—to the products of his own labor—to the protection of law—and to the common advantages of society."
Recommended
Ilya Shapiro: "Race-Based Government in Paradise? Hawaii v. OHA and the Akaka Bill"
Who: Ilya Shapiro What: Speech on "Race-Based Government in Paradise? Hawaii v. OHA and the Akaka Bill" Where: Bello Mansion Host: Dallas Federalist Society Lawyers Chapter
Ilya Shapiro: "How I spent My Summer Vacation: Rule of Law in Iraq"
Who: Ilya Shapiro What: Speech on "How I spent My Summer Vacation: Rule of Law in Iraq" Where: University of Louisville Law School Host: University of Louisville Law School Federalist Society Chapter
Ilya Shapiro Debate on Race-Based Government
Who: Ilya Shapiro What: Debate on "Race-Based Government in Paradise? Hawaii v. OHA" Where: Manoa Campus, 2515 Dole Street Classroom 2 Host: University of Hawaii Law School Federalist Society Chapter
Ask the Expert: Robert A. Levy on the Possibility of an Assault Weapons Ban
Robert A. Levy, chairman of Cato's board of directors and the man who organized the plaintiffs' case in D.C. v. Heller, discusses the political feasibility of an Assault Weapons Ban proposal in Congress and why such a ban may be considered unconstitutional today.
Mugabe's Apologists
By Marian Tupy: "Robert Mugabe's participation in the European Union-Africa summit in Lisbon over the weekend was a triumph of Zimbabwean diplomacy. Both African and EU leaders must share the blame for this farce. Zimbabwe's foreign ministry managed to portray the octogenarian dictator, who has presided over widespread violations of human rights and an astonishing economic collapse, as the victim of a Western conspiracy."
A Bill of Rights Europe Did Not Need
By Anthony de Jasay: "Even if it were less woolly and silly, the Charter of Fundamental Rights could hardly become a force for good."
Free Kareem!
Dr. Tom G. Palmer, Cato's Vice President for International Programs, speaks out against the imprisonment of a young Egyptian blogger. November 9th marks the one year anniversary of Kareem's incarceration. For more information about the global effort to free Kareem, and about rallies in your area, visit www.freekareem.org .
A Dangerous Position on Darfur
By Ted Galen Carpenter and Christopher Preble: "The suffering in Darfur cries out for action, but it is not clear that it calls for military action, much less that U.S. troops should lead the effort. There are dozens of countries that have far greater tangible interests at stake in Darfur than does America, and many of these countries also possess the capacity to deploy forces there."
Getting Kareem Freed
By Tom G. Palmer: "Four years in prison for blogging: three of them for inciting 'hatred of Islam' and one for 'insulting the president.' That's the sentence handed down by an Egyptian judge to a young Egyptian blogger, Abdelkareem Nabil Soliman, generally known in the blogosphere as 'Kareem.'"
Infidel: My Journey from Somalia to the West
By Ayaan Hirsi Ali: "I am sad that women who have inherited this social order, this civilization called the West, with its values of human rights, curiosity, trust, and integrity, might stand by and watch its decline."
Globalization, Cosmopolitanism, and Personal Identity
Many critics of increasing freedom of trade and of movement, and the phenomena of cosmopolitanism and globalization that result from such freedom, insist that the consequence of greater trade and movement is a net loss of identity. Globalization is, they allege, destructive of personal identity itself, which they see as reliant on sharply delineated differences among cultures. In this paper, Tom Palmer sets out the anti-globalist critique and then shows that cosmopolitanism and globalization are hardly new phenomena, but have deep roots in European civilization.