[Download] "Beyond the Torture Memos: Perceptual Filters, Cultural Commitments, And Partisan Identity." by Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law " eBook PDF Kindle ePub Free
eBook details
- Title: Beyond the Torture Memos: Perceptual Filters, Cultural Commitments, And Partisan Identity.
- Author : Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law
- Release Date : January 22, 2009
- Genre: Law,Books,Professional & Technical,
- Pages : * pages
- Size : 288 KB
Description
Efforts to hold the torture memo authors professionally accountable for their advice will face two difficulties. First, it will likely be difficult to prove that the memos were written in bad faith. While legal scholars and other lawyers agree nearly universally that the memos represent bad legal advice, bad advice does not necessarily equate to bad-faith advice. The existence of perceptual filters and deep partisan identification may have shaped the lawyers' views of the situation in ways that appear unfathomable to outsiders. Second, even if the Office of Professional Responsibility finds evidence of professional misconduct, there is a risk that efforts to hold the memo authors accountable will lack widespread political support, as onlookers view such efforts through their own perceptual frameworks and partisan commitments. I. INTRODUCTION