Panel

Prison

Habeas Corpus The Great Writ

ABOUT 

  • ABOUT Leigh Bienen

    Leigh Bienen is a Senior Lecturer at Northwestern Law School and Director of the Chicago Homicide Project. The project focuses on revealing past homicides – using hand written documents from the Chicago Police Department – in the city from 1870 to 1930. With nearly 11,000 documented homicides, Bienen and her team help to frame the murders contextually and legally for today’s audience.

    Profile
  • ABOUT Joseph Margulies

    Joseph Margulies, clinical associate professor of law at Northwestern School of Law and assistant director of the MacArthur Justice Center, served as legal counsel of record on many of the leading cases involving detainees at Guantanamo Bay. On behalf of his clients, Margulies worked to prove that detainees are eligible for the Writ of Habeas Corpus under American law. He has written several opinion pieces on the subject of prisoner rights for publications such as the The Washington Post and The Chicago Tribune. Profile
  • ABOUT Larry Yackle

    Larry Yackle is the author of numerous books including Federal Courts: Habeas Corpus and Reclaiming the Federal Courts. He is the Basil Yanakakis Faculty Research Scholar and Professor of Law at Boston University School of Law. His research interest is federal Habeas Corpus and state prisoners and he has written on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union in Supreme Court cases involving Habeas Corpus. Profile
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The writ of habeas corpus—the great writ—has been a bedrock of the legal and political structure of democratic societies for centuries. How did this right, which protects individuals against unlawful imprisonment, come about, and why has it been fundamental to our democratic system? Under what circumstances has habeas corpus been challenged, suspended, or even revoked?

Three experts in the writ of habeas corpus tackle these questions while discussing the importance of the great writ during times of peril in the United States. Panelists Leigh Bienen, Joseph Margulies, and Larry Yackle comment on the current state of habeas corpus in this era of terrorism and the Patriot Act. They compare our present state to previous moments of xenophobia in the United States.

This lecture was generously sponsored in part by Miller Shakman & Beem.

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