[LAW-LIB:55154] HELP: Help needed finding obscure articles - and NOW a few more.

From: Brian Baker (bbaker@sjcl.edu)
Date: Thu Mar 27 2008 - 10:30:38 PDT

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    Dear Colleagues,

    I want to thank you for all the help I received on this list of
    articles. I am now down to needing just 4 of the original articles I
    was asked to get.

    Unfortunately, the same Professor just found 5 more articles that he
    needs. Fortunately, they all come from the April 2008 edition of
    Nature Neuroscience, Volume 11, Issue 4. The 5 articles comprise pages
    389 to 416. If anyone could provide these, I would be indebted again.
    I guess I'm going to go broke via indebtedness. ;-)

    Of the original list, the 4 remaining that I need are below.

    Once again, it is possible that the author for Number 2 is actually
    Sarkin, and not Rakate.

    1. Klug H., Amnesty, Amnesia and Remembrance: International
    Obligations and the Need to Prevent the Repetition of Gross Violations
    of Human Rights, 92 Contemporary International Issues 316 (1998)

    2. *Rakate P.K., Preconditions and Processes for Establishing a
    Truth and Reconciliation Commission in Rwanda: The Possible Interim Role
    of Gacaca Community Courts, 2 Law, Democracy and Development 223 (1999)

    3. Sarkin J., Transitional Justice and the Prosecution Model: The
    Experience of Ethiopia 2 Law, Democracy and Development 253 (1999)

    4. Scott R., Procedures at Inquiries - The Duty to Be Fair, 3 The
    Law Quarterly Review 596 - 616 (1995)

    Thank you for any help you can provide.

    Sincerely,

    Brian

    Brian L. Baker, JD, MLS
    Director of the Law Library
    & Professor of Law
    San Joaquin College of Law
    E: bbaker@sjcl.edu V: 559-323-2100 F: 559-323-5566
    http://www.sjcl.edu/baker
    http://www.frappr.com/bbaker

    As nightfall does not come all at once, neither does oppression. In both
    instances, there is a twilight when everything remains seemingly
    unchanged. And it is in such twilight that we all must be aware of
    change in the air however slight, lest we become unwitting victims of
    the darkness.

    Justice William O. Douglas, US Supreme Court (1939-75)



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