Chibli mallat wikipedia
Chibli Mallat
Lebanese lawyer and activist
Chibli Mallat (born May 10, ) is a Lebanese international lawyer, legal scholar, and a former candidate for presidency in Lebanon.
Family and education
Mallat is the son of Nouhad Diab and Wajdi Mallat, the first president of the Lebanese Constitutional Council (Arabic المجلس الدستوري) of Lebanon, from to , and has three sisters.
His namesake grandfather was known across the Arab world as 'the Poet of the Cedars'. His granduncle Tamer Mallat was a judge and a poet, whose decisions and poetry he rediscovered and published; he also edited a selection of his father's writings in a bilingual French and Arabic book.
Chibli mallat wikipedia in tamil Kasaba and J. Hidden categories: Webarchive template wayback links CS1 French-language sources fr CS1 maint: archived copy as title All articles with dead external links Articles with dead external links from November Articles with permanently dead external links CS1 Arabic-language sources ar Articles with short description Short description matches Wikidata Articles needing additional references from January All articles needing additional references Wikipedia neutral point of view disputes from January All Wikipedia neutral point of view disputes Articles with multiple maintenance issues Pages using infobox person with multiple parents Articles with hCards All articles with unsourced statements Articles with unsourced statements from January Wikiwand for Firefox. Sana'a [ gyara sashe gyara masomin ].He is married to Nayla Chalhoub, and they have two adult sons. He published an illustrated book for children in , Aventures a Beyrouth, with his son.
Educated in Lebanon, the United States and Europe, Mallat received his PhD from the law department of London University's School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) in
Career
Iraq has been a focus for him since as key to change in the Middle East, and he founded the International Committee for a Free Iraq (ICFI) in with Edward Mortimer and Ahmad Chalabi to seek the end of dictatorship in Baghdad.[1] The ICFI brought together about a hundred Iraqi and international personalities, including leading US senators like Claiborne Pell, then chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and John McCain, as well as British MP David Howell, then chairman of the Select Committee on Foreign Affairs, and respected Arab public figures like Saad Eddin Ibrahim and Adonis, see Adunis.[2] Many of the committee's Iraqi members became the leaders of Iraq after the end of Baathist dictatorship in , including Mohammed Bahr al-Uloum as the first president of the Iraqi Governing Council, Jalal Talibani as president and Hoshyar Zebari as Foreign Minister.
Mallat was opposed to the US-led invasion,[3] and sought with the support of then US Deputy Secretary of Defense Paul Wolfowitz an alternative Security Council Resolution that would have declared Saddam Hussein's presidency illegitimate and advocated the deployment of human rights monitors in Iraq during the transition to democracy.[4]
From to , he research and teaching positions at the University of California Berkeley School of Law (Boalt Hall) in and at the School of Oriental and African Studies, where as a lecturer in Islamic Law he received his first tenured position in [citation needed] He taught at the Islamic University in Lebanon in , and was twice visiting professor at the University of Lyon and at the University of Virginia School of Law.[citation needed] In , he received professorial tenure at Saint Joseph University (USJ) in Lebanon and was appointed a year later to the first EU Jean Monnet Chair in European Law in the Middle East.
In , he initiated a campaign against Saddam Hussein with officials in Kuwait, London and Washington that developed into INDICT, a nongovernmental organisation he helped found in Britain in [citation needed] By , INDICT had received open support in the American Congress and in the British Parliament, and was embraced by then US President Bill Clinton and British Prime Minister Tony Blair.[5] The campaign laid the ground for a case against Saddam Hussein in Belgium in , and his eventual trial in Iraq in A third case was won against Muammar Gaddafi in Beirut courts for the families of the historic leader of the Shi'i community Musa al-Sadr and his two companions, journalist Abbas Badreddin and cleric Muhammad Ya`qub, who disappeared in Libya upon their official invitation by Gaddafi in August [6]
In 12 February , he won a judgement in the case of Victims of Sabra and Shatila v.
Ariel Sharon et al., under the law of universal jurisdiction in Belgium which resulted in Belgium removing the court's jurisdiction.[7] He visited Iraq in late and again in early to accelerate the recognition of the Iraqi Governing Council as the official government of Iraq, a move opposed by Paul Bremer and Kofi Annan.[8]
In , he spent one year at Princeton University where he was a Visiting Professor at the Woodrow Wilson School, Fellow in the Program in Law and Public Affairs, Fellow in the University Center for Human Values, Fellow in the Program in International and Regional Studies and a Distinguished Visitor in the Bobst Center for Peace and Justice.[9] A became a professor of Middle Eastern Politics and Law at the University of Utah since and a Presidential Professor in He is now an emeritus professor.
Mallat was appointed in Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques Visiting Professor of Islamic Legal Studies at Harvard Law School. In Summer , he helped the Iraqi president Fouad Masum and Parliamentary Speaker Salim al-Jabouri construct the constitutional argument that put an end to the Prime Ministership of Nouri al-Maliki.[10]
He taught in Fall at Yale Law School as Visiting Professor of Law and Oscar M.
Ruebhausen Distinguished Senior Fellow.[11] In Spring , he was a visiting professor at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) in Paris.
In , he helped found Humanist Lebanon, organizing regular demonstrations in the centre of Beirut to end the presidential void in the name of the Constitution.[12]
In , he resigned his full-time positions at Saint Joseph's University and at the University of Utah, but remained on the University of Utah's law faculty as Emeritus Presidential Professor of Law.
In , he was invited as visiting senior fellow at the school of law of Sciences-Po in Paris to develop his work on comparative constitutional law.[13]
In his native Lebanon, Mallat ran for president in in an unprecedented challenge to the incumbent, Emile Lahoud, who had relied on the Damascus government of Bashar al-Asad to force an unconstitutional extension of his mandate.
During the Cedar Revolution which was triggered by the assassination of the president's main opponent, Rafiq al-Hariri, Mallat was active in street protests and in the leadership,[14] where his central advocacy was the establishment of an international, hybrid tribunal to arrest and try the assassins of Hariri and scores of other victims - eventually known as the Special Tribunal for Lebanon, and the removal of the 'coercively-extended president' from power.'[15] Mallat's campaign was initiated in November to push a fractured and direction-less revolution towards its active materialisation in a presidency 'that looked like the people who made it.'[16]
Denigrated by some as 'quixotic',[17] the campaign was received in the local, regional and international media as a breakthrough for Arab democracy in its direct, people-based nonviolent challenge to dictators for life.[18] Over a period of seven months, Mallat's team took its message to several cities and villages of Lebanon, and was supported by unprecedented mobilisation of the Lebanese diaspora, especially in the US.
Internationally, the campaign culminated in a Security Council Presidential Statement that undermined the legitimacy of Emile Lahoud, and translated in a mass popular meeting on 14 March with a single motto: 'Lahoud must go'.[19] As 'the primary architect' of Lahoud's demise,[20] Mallat joined with the leadership of the March 14 coalition to develop his constitutional, nonviolent plan to replace Lahoud by a freely elected president.[21] With the political deadlock that ensued, Mallat predicted a new bout of 'immense violence' descending on the country.[22]
When the war against Israel was triggered by Hezbollah on 12 July , Mallat was forced to interrupt his campaign on the ground.
He denounced the attack of Hezbollah and debated its foreign affairs representative on television in the midst of the bombardments. Soon after the ceasefire, which he had helped engineer through an active collaboration with the Lebanese government's acting foreign minister, he accepted an offer by Princeton University and left for the US with his family.
At Princeton, he completed six books, including two on the campaign.[23]
In , the Lebanese leader Walid Jumblat put his name repeatedly out for the presidency of Lebanon, arguing his appeal to the youth, his competence in law and economics, and his legal achievements.[24][25]
Writings
Mallat is the author or editor of some forty books, and has published dozens of scholarly articles and book chapters.[26]
Collaborative work
Academic collaborative work has seen him serving as a joint founder and general editor of the Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, now at Brill,[27] a series on 'Horizons Européens' for the Centre d'Etudes de l'Union Européenne at Saint Joseph University,[28] and a series on Islamic and Middle Eastern Law at Kluwer Law International as director of the Center of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law at the School of Oriental and African Studies.[29] He has also contributed several entries and chapters to specialised encyclopedias of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, and of comparative law.[30] In , he helped found and became the commissioning editor of Bada'e',[31] a niche publishing house of books in Arabic, French and English on the Middle East.
Islamic and Middle Eastern law
In his work on Islamic and Middle Eastern law, he has engaged scholarship from the West and from the Middle East in a search for a common language of human rights and the rule of law to be conveyed from within the uniquely rich legal tradition of the Middle East from Hammurabi to the present.
His first book, the Renewal of Islamic Law, which focused on the legal works of the most innovative Islamic scholar of the 20th century, the Iraqi Mohammad Baqir al-Sadr, received the North America Middle East Studies Association's annual prize, the Albert Hourani Book Award.
Chibli mallat wikipedia shqip: Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. His Introduction to Middle Eastern Law , was published in , and expanded the field of Islamic law to include the Middle East pre-Islamic legal tradition as an important component for legal research, and to prominently feature case law as a novel and essential focus to understand the law applied in everyday's life. A primer on the Lebanese legal system. Hakkokin dan Adam da siyasa [ gyara sashe gyara masomin ].
Its Arabic version, published in , circulated underground in Iraq until the demise of Saddam Hussein in , and was reprinted several times since. The book was reviewed in over a hundred academic and press outlets, and revealed to the West a humanist scholarship at the highest intellectual level in Najaf. In , he published Iraq- Guide to Law and Policy at Aspen/Kluwer Law International.
His Introduction to Middle Eastern Law, was published in , and expanded the field of Islamic law to include the Middle East pre-Islamic legal tradition as an important component for legal research, and to prominently feature case law as a novel and essential focus to understand the law applied in everyday's life.[32]
In , he published an extensive treatise on Saudi Arabian Law at Oxford University Press, The Normalization of Saudi Law.
References
- ^A.M. Rosenthal, 'On my mind: Praying in London', The New York Times, 25 June [1]
- ^Mallat, 'Voices of opposition: The International Committee for a Free Iraq', in E. Goldberg, R. Kasaba and J. Migdal eds., Rules and Rights in the Middle East: Democracy, Law and Society, University of Washington Press, Seattle, ; Mallat, 'Claiborne Pell and the roots of Iraqi regime change', The Daily Star, 13 January [2]
- ^"".
. Retrieved
- ^See statement of Wolfowitz in 'Senior Defense Officials Interview with Chris Core, WMAL Radio', 4 March " News Transcript: Senior Defense Officials Interview with Chris Core, WMAL Radio". Archived from the original on Retrieved ; Text of UNSCR draft and generally on 'the Democratic Iraq Initiative' in Mallat, Iraq: Guide to Law and Policy, Kluwer, Boston , 'The March to War', ; on human rights monitors deployment, Id.
at
- ^Paul Vaugh, 'Britain campaigns to indict Saddam', The Independent, 2 December
- ^Extensive coverage of the case at Imam Sadr Center.
- ^Victims of Sabra and Shatila v. Ariel Sharon et al., Belgian Court of Cassation, Feb. 12, , 42 International Legal Materials ().
On this case, see for example, John Borneman ed., The case of Ariel Sharon and the fate of universal jurisdiction (Princeton ) (including essays by John Borneman, Chibli Mallat, Luc Walleyn, Laurie King-Irani, Dan Rabinowitz, Sally Falk Moore, Paul W. Kahn, and Reed Brody); Deena Hurwitz, 'Universal Jurisdiction and the Dilemmas of International Criminal Justice: The Sabra and Shatila Case in Belgium', in Human Rights Advocacy Stories (Hurwitz, Satterthwaite & Ford eds., ); Steven R.
Ratner, 'Belgium's War Crimes Statute: a Postmortem' 97 American Journal of International Law ().
- ^Mallat, 'Note to the U.N.: Hands Off Iraqi Politics', The New York Times, 19 January [3]; Mallat, 'The record of UN apparatchiks and what can no longer be accepted in Iraq', The Daily Star, 12 June [4]Archived at the Wayback Machine.
- ^Archived at the Wayback Machine
- ^"Kalam alnass", aired LBCI television August 14, , كلام الناس من بيروت إلى بغداد [5].
- ^"News | Yale Law School".Chibli mallat wikipedia Chibli Mallat during a speech at the Salzburg Seminar in September Cotran , Kluwer Law International. Rukunoni : CS1 maint: archived copy as title Haihuwan Rayayyun mutane Shafuka masu fassarorin da ba'a duba ba. Archived at the Wayback Machine.
. Retrieved
- ^"L'appel de Chibli Mallat aux Libanais à se réapproprier leur Constitution". 27 August Archived from the original on
- ^"Chercheurs académiques invités en ". (in French). Retrieved
- ^"Le refus de l'impunité: CHEBLI MALLAT, AVOCAT D'AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL ET PROFESSEUR À L'UNIVERSITÉ SAINT-JOSEPH", Le Monde, 30 March , ?xtmc=chebli_mallat&xtcr=2
- ^Mallat, Lebanon's Cedar Revolution, an Essay on Nonviolence and Justice, Beirut, Lir, , 88, also available at [6].
- ^See for instance, speech at Restaurant Al Dente, 3 February , Bayrut fi khabar al-mustaqbal (Beirut in a future mode), reproduced in Presidential Talk, Beirut, Dar al-Jadid, , also available at "Archived copy"(PDF).
Archived from the original(PDF) on Retrieved
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). - ^Blanford, Nicholas (). Killing Mr Lebanon (Repr.ed.). London: I.B. Tauris. p. ISBN.
- ^Some thirty profiles were published, including in Newsweek, the Financial Times, The New York Times, Voice of America, the main Arab papers, Der Standard (Austria), and others.
Mallat appeared in leading television interviews, including the BBC Hardtalk, CNN Larry King, Kalam al-Nas (LBCI), transcript in English hereArchived at the Wayback Machine, Niqtat Hiwar (al-'Arabiyya).
Chibli mallat wikipedia in hindi A cikin , shugaban na Lebanon Walid Jumblat ya gabatar da sunansa akai-akai don neman shugabancin Lebanon, [2] yana ba da hujjarsa ga matasa, kwarewarsa a fannin doka da tattalin arziki, da nasarorin da ya samu a shari'a. Cotran , Kluwer Law International. The neutrality of this article is disputed. Wikiwand for Edge.A sample of the interviews and profiles was published in A Compelling Presidency: The Mallat Campaign in World News, Beirut, April
- ^Mallat, Lahoud must go for Lebanon to progressFinancial Times, 7 June , also available hereArchived at the Wayback Machine. Mallat campaign Press Release Commemoration rally of PM Hariri's murder sends message: Lahoud must goArchived at the Wayback Machine, 14 March
- ^Shadia Awwad (23 February ).
"Mallat muhandis hamlat isqat lahhud (Mallat is the architect of the deposition of Lahud)". Ukaz. Saudi Arabia.
- ^Plan presented at the Bristol meeting of the full leadership of the March 14 coalition on February 16, Details in "al-'amaliyya al-dusturiyya (the constitutional process)", in Presidential Talks, See in English Mallat, Here's how to get rid of Emile Lahoud[permanent dead link], The Daily Star, 4 March
- ^Mallat, "31 May [Coming] War announced", Speech at Saint-Joseph's University,31 May , in Presidential Talks, pp.
- ^See under Publications and Books from the presidential campaign
- ^"وليد جنبلاط لـ القبس: الكويت والسعودية لن تعودا إلى زمن إغداق الأموال على لبنان دون شرط".Chibli mallat wikipedia in english A sauran ayyukan. Mallat Law Firm was founded in by Wajdi Mallat, a former minister and president of the Beirut bar. In , he was invited as visiting senior fellow at the school of law of Sciences-Po in Paris to develop his work on comparative constitutional law. In , he helped found Humanist Lebanon, organizing regular demonstrations in the centre of Beirut to end the presidential void in the name of the Constitution.
جريدة القبس. Retrieved
- ^"جنبلاط: أطرح اسم شبلي الملاط للرئاسة وهناك حوار في المنطقة أكبر مني ومن بري ألا يجب أن نستفيد منه؟". Elnashra News (in Arabic). Retrieved
- ^For list, see entry Chibli Mallat at
- ^://; 'Building an intellectual monument, The Yearbook in Eugene Cotran's legacy',[7]Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, Vol, ,
- ^"[USJ] - Centre d'études sur l'Union européenne - Chaire Jean Monnet".
- ^"CIMEL Publications SOAS University of London".
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Archived from the original on Retrieved
- '^'Comparative law and the Islamic (Middle Eastern) legal culture', in Mathias Reimann and Reinhard Zimmermann eds., Oxford Handbook of Comparative Law, OUP, , ; 'Islam and the constitutional order', in Michel Rosenfeld and Andras Sajo eds, Oxford Handbook of Comparative Constitutional Law, Oxford University Press, , (Also in Japanese, published tr.
and ed. Makoto Mizutani); Emtries 'Islamic Law in Arab Countries', 'Commercial Law: Islamic Law (Modern)', 'Contract: Contracts and Unilateral Acts in Islamic Law ', 'International Law: Islamic Public Law', 'Constitutional Law: Constitutions and Constitutional Law in Islamic Law: Overview and The Arab Countries', in Stanley Katz general ed., Baber Johansen, ME and Islam ed., The Encyclopedia of Legal History, Oxford UP ; 'Attorney', entry in Encyclopaedia of Islam 3d ed., ; 'Islamic Legal Theory- Introducing usul al-fiqh, entry in IVR Encyclopaedia of Legal Theory and Philosophy of Law, ; 'Muhammad Baqer al-Sadr', 'Iraq', 'Contracts', entries in Encyclopaedia of the Modern Islamic World, Oxford University Press,
- ^"Bada2e3".
- ^Nadjma Yassari, Book Review, American Journal of Comparative Law (),