by Lib Law Administrator | Nov 13, 2022 | Constitutional law, Judiciary
By Worlea – Saywah Dunah, Guest Author Liberia has a new Chief Justice, a lady, and she breathes fiercely. Chief Justice Youh promised one thing at both confirmation and induction: that, as the statue that guards the Temple of Justice in Monrovia, her bench will be...
by Lib Law Administrator | Oct 30, 2022 | Law practice
By: Atty. Emmanuel N. Reeves, Guest Author Startup entrepreneurs dream of seed capital to grow their startup businesses. Young footballers dream about signing their first professional contracts, and rookie musicians dream of recording their first albums. These...
by Lib Law Administrator | Oct 29, 2022 | Judiciary
By: Windor D. Tarplah, Esq. The sterling heights of the Office of Chief Justice of the Republic of Liberia is an acclaimed position coveted by many of Liberia’s finest and not-so-fine jurists. For the finest of the bunch, they are ostensibly drawn to the leverage the...
by Lib Law Administrator | Oct 29, 2022 | Criminal Justice
By: Wonder K. Freeman The law should be law, and politics, politics. The Law in general, as much as it intermingles with politics, should be, in its application, apolitical and non-partisan – to say the least. And politics? Well, just the opposite of law – political... by Lib Law Administrator | Apr 15, 2021 | Citizenship Law, Constitutional law, Human Rights Law
By Arafat Ibnul Bashar Click below to read: On automatic loss of citizenship. Looking into the Alvin Teage Jalloh...
by Lib Law Administrator | Aug 2, 2018 | Constitutional law, Criminal Justice, Human Rights Law, International Law
The recent move to repeal Liberia’s Criminal Libel laws by the newly elected Government of former Liberian Football legend, George Manneh Weah, has been hailed by human rights groups as a positive step in the right direction. The effort to decriminalise section 11.11...
by Lib Law Administrator | Apr 15, 2018 | Environmental Law
In 2012, when former President Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf proposed relocating the capital to Zekepa, her announcement did not go without scrutiny. There were those who saw the pronouncement as yet another empty-promise. She had waged war on corruption but later... by Lib Law Administrator | Oct 5, 2013 | Constitutional law, Criminal Justice, Human Rights Law, Judiciary, Law practice
By: Cllr. Philip A.Z> Banks, III Click link below: Access to Justice Sin Qui Non to Peaceful Coexistence in Post-war Liberia by Lib Law Administrator | Mar 10, 2010 | Constitutional law, Judiciary, Law practice
By: Cllr. Henry Reed Cooper Click link below to read: The Status of a Legislator Appearing before the Court as a Legal Practitioner