Tag: Constitutional Calamities

From Revolution to Constitutional Ambiguity: The Legal Paradoxes of Syria’s Transition
The remarkable and tragic victory of the Syrian revolution, after a brutal one-and-a-half-decade struggle, marked by hundreds of thousands of deaths and millions of displaced citizens, finally witnessed its dawn on December 7, 2024. However, the aftermathttps://blog-iacl-aidc.org/2025-posts/2025/3/20/from-revolution-to-constitution-making-the-syrian-peoples-struggle-and-legal-ambiguity-in-the-new-constitutional-declarationh of that historic date bears no resemblance to any previous state coup in Syria. Unlike the multiple coups […]
Self-nomination for the fifty-one session of the UNHRC resolution 44/8 regarding human rights of internally displaced persons
Self-nomination for the fifty-one session of the UNHRC resolution 44/8 regarding human rights of internally displaced persons

Iraq urgently needs a real constitution
Iraq urgently needs a real constitution. The number of reasons for the state’s failure and constitutional misery have been growing daily since 2005 (Alnasir, 2021b; Cordesman & Molot, 2019; Jayamaha et al., 2017; Flibbert, 2013; Underhill, 2014)1 and are exploding as 2023 approaches and many of those reasons are being adults. This isn’t specifically related […]