Who鈥檚 liable in a 鈥榮elf-driving鈥 car crash?
Case Western Reserve UniversityCase Western Reserve University law professor examines legal grey area when semi-autonomous vehicles are involved in accidents
Case Western Reserve University law professor examines legal grey area when semi-autonomous vehicles are involved in accidents
A clinical researcher, who has studied the lack of hygiene practices among hospital patients, is urging not just hospitals鈥攂ut those who end up there鈥攖o do more to fight against the novel coronavirus, which had infected more than 2 million people worldwide by mid-April.
Two Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine bioethicists are calling on organized medicine to end its refusal to provide clinical guidance regarding the care of patients actively seeking assistance in dying.
A $3.2 billion (and counting) transformation of Chicago鈥檚 notorious high-rise public housing has dramatically changed the urban landscape there, attracting affluent residents to segregated areas and catalyzing revitalization in long-marginalized neighborhoods. But far fewer low-income Chicagoans at the heart of the city鈥檚 initiative鈥攔eplacing deteriorating public housing with high-quality mixed-income communities鈥攈ave been helped than intended when the ambitious plan was launched 15 years ago.
A new book by Case Western Reserve University School of Law Professor Sharona Hoffman details how people can make sure elderly parents or other relatives get the care they need to maintain fulfilling lifestyles and social ties. It鈥檚 also a book about how baby boomers can prepare for their own aging. "Aging with a Plan: How a Little Thought Today Can Vastly Improve Your Tomorrow" (Praeger Publishers, 2015) is a new release as of May.
Half a century ago, a concentrated global effort nearly wiped a disfiguring tropical disease from the face of the earth. Now, says Case Western Reserve鈥檚 James W. Kazura, MD, it鈥檚 time to complete the work.
A Blue Ribbon panel of former international tribunal prosecutors, international tribunal judges and leading academics, led by Case Western Reserve University Law Professor Michael Scharf and David Crane, former Chief Prosecutor of the Special Court for Sierra Leone, will present a blueprint for a tribunal to prosecute perpetrators of atrocities in Syria. The panel鈥檚 鈥淪tatute for a Syrian Extraordinary Tribunal to Prosecute Atrocity Crimes鈥 will be discussed in Washington, D.C., at The National Press Club, 8:30 a.m. on Thursday, Oct. 3. Speakers include Scharf, Crane, and possibly members of Congress. The event will be moderated by Paul Williams, president of the Public International Law & Policy Group.
The very people Superman could not save were his own creators鈥擩erry Siegel, the writer, and Joe Shuster, the comic artist.
In just a few months, five leaders of the genocidal Khmer Rouge regime will go on trial before the U.N.-established war crimes Tribunal in Cambodia (known as the ECCC). Case Western Reserve University School of Law's globe-trotting professor Michael Scharf and two of his students recently traveled to Phnom Penh to help the ECCC prepare for the historic "Killing Fields Trials."聺