Henry J. Richardson, III

2008 Henry J. Richardson, III Address: Temple Law School 1719 N. Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19122 [email protected] (215) 204-8987 Fax:...
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2008

Henry J. Richardson, III Address:

Temple Law School 1719 N. Broad Street Philadelphia, PA 19122 [email protected] (215) 204-8987 Fax: (215) 204-1185

Marital Status:

Married to Renee Poussaint Richardson

Health:

Excellent

Education:

Universite de Besancon, France Certificat en Histoire, 1962 Antioch College Yellow Springs, Ohio A.B. (History) 1963 Yale Law School LL.B., 1966 U.C.L.A. School of Law LL.M., 1971

Professional Experience:

International Legal Advisor, Government of Malawi, Central Africa, 1966-68. Faculty Africanist in Law, African Studies Center, U.C.L.A. 1969-71. Assistant Professor, School of Law, Indiana University, 1973-74. Associate Professor, School of Law, Indiana University,1974-75. Visiting Associate Professor, Northwestern Law School, 1975-76. National Security Council Staff (Africa, International Organizations). The White House, 1977-79. Senior Foreign Policy Advisor, Congressman Charles Diggs and Congressional Black Caucus, 1979. Visiting Adjunct Professor, Department of Political Science, Howard University, 1979-80. Attorney-Advisor, Office of the General Counsel (Intelligence International, Investigative Policy), Department of Defense, September 1979 - July 1981. Associate Professor, Temple Law School, July 1981 Co-Director and Professor, Temple Summer Law Program, Accra, Ghana, July - August, 1981. 1

2008 Professor of Law, 1983-present, International Scholar, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Washington, D.C. 1988-89. Honors:

Professional Affiliations:

Maxwell Afro-Asian Fellowship, 1966-68. Maxwell Writing Fellowship, 1968-69. UCLA-Ford LL.M Fellowship, 1969-71. 1973 Summer Faculty Research Fellowship, Indiana University. Visiting Scholar, Temple University Law School, March 1979. Friel-Scanlan Award for Best Faculty Scholarship, Temple Law School, 1997. Member, Indiana Bar. Founding Member of National Conference of Black Lawyers. Former Chairman, Task force on International Affairs and former NGO United Nations Representative. American Society of International Law Vice President 1990-1992. Honorary Vice President 1992- (Member, Executive Council and numerous committees). World Peace Through Law Center, Section on International Legal Education. TransAfrica. National Bar Association (International Affairs Committee). Overseas Development Council. Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law (Southern Africa Project). Founding Member, PAAIL (Project for the Advancement of African-Americans in International Law) 1996. Council on Foreign Relations (Various discussion groups).

Selected Professional Activities: Advisor to Constitutional Commission of Rwanda on Drafting of new Rwandan Constitution (2002). International Law-related papers and panels for the American Society of International Law and other professional and academic associations. Speaking engagements and op-ed columns. Member of assorted ASIL panels and study groups. 2

2008 Led the fight in ASIL Executive Council to divest the Society’s stock portfolio of South African-related stocks (Fall, 1985). Chair, Subcommittee on International Law, National Conference of Black Lawyers. Co-Director, ASIL/PAIL/Ford study on Women and Minorities in International Law (1986-87). Teaching, Service, Academic duties, Temple Law School. U.S.-Soviet Dialog on Nuclear Disarmament, Institute for Policy Studies, Washington, D.C. Chair and Creator of Butcher Medal Committee, American Society of International Law 1993 – 1998. Teaching

Areas:

International Law, International Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Foreign Policy and International Organizations.

Areas of Research:

Cases and Materials on the Law of Privacy (3rd revision, 1975). Cases and Materials on Law and Social Change (1976). International Law and Development (emerging legal obligations to reallocate significant resources, especially relative to Africa). International Human Rights. Converging Trends in U. S. and International Law. International Law and South Africa. International Law and African-Americans.

Publications THE ORIGINS OF AFRICAN-AMERICAN INTERESTS IN INTERNATIONAL LAW (CAROLINA ACADEMIC PRESS 2008). Patrolling the Resource Transfer Frontier: Economic Rights and the South African Constitutional Court's Contributions to International Justice, 9 AFRICAN STUD. Q. (2007). Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as an International Human Rights Leader, 52 VILL. L. REV. 471 (2007). The Danger of Oligarchy within the Pan-Africanist Authority of the African Union, 13 TRANSNAT’L L. & CONTEMP. PROBS. 255 (2003). 3

2008 U.S. Hegemony, Race, and Oil in Deciding United Nations Security Council Resolution 1441 on Iraq, 17 TEMPLE INT’L & COMP.L.J. 27 (2003). Reverend Leon Sullivan’s Principles, Race and International Law: A Comment, 15 TEMPLE INT’L & COMP. L. J. 55 (2001). Symposium, A Critical Thought on Self Determination for East Timor and Kosovo, 14 TEMP. INT’L. & COMP. L.J. 101 (2001). Symposium, Excluding Race Strategies from International Legal History: The Self-executing Treaty Doctrine and the Southern Africa Tripartite Agreement, 45 VILL. L. REV. 1091 (2000). Dinner and Self-Determination, in CRITICAL RACE THEORY: HISTORIES, CROSSROADS, DIRECTIONS Critical Race Theory Conference, Yale Law School, Nov. 1999 (Yale University Press). Book Review, 93 AM. J. OF INT’L L. 988 (1999); S. Akweenda, INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE PROTECTION OF NAMIBIAN’S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY: BOUNDARIES AND TERRITORIAL CLAIMS, (Spring, 1999). The UN Secretary-General Drops in on Saddam Hussein: A Few Reflections, TEMPLE INTERNATIONAL LAW SOCIETY NEWSLETTER, Spring, 1998. Tribute to Myres McDougal, YALE LAW REPORT (Fall, 1998). Commentary, The Execution of Angel Breard By the United States: Violating an Order of the International Court of Justice, 12 TEMP. INT’L & COMP. L.J. 121 (1998). John M. Lindsey, Professor Emeritus, 1932-1998, 12 TEMP. INT’L & COMP. L.J. I (1998). THE PHILADELPHIA SUNDAY SUN, Ouster of Boutros-Ghali a Painful Loss to United Nations January 12, 1997, p.8. Failed States. Self-Determination, and Preventive Diplomacy: Colonialist Nostalgia & Democratic Expectations, 10 TEMPLE INT’L & COMP. L.J., p.1 (1996) (Winner of Friel—Scanlan Award, 1977, for best Faculty Scholarship). Recent Issues in International Human Rights Law for Africa; African Regional Integration and Human Rights: Potential Problems; Regionalism in Africa; Papers, all published in PROCEEDINGS OF THE 89TH ANNUAL MEETING. THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, December 1995, at p. 484,500, and 551 respectively. “The Constitutive Fiction of Neutrality in United Nations Peacekeeping”, Paper presented in August 1995 at the African Society of International and Comparative Law, South Africa. Published in the Proceedings of the African Society, 1995. “INTERNATIONAL LAW: A SOUTH AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE” by John Dugard; Book Review, 89 A.S.I.L. 650 (1995). “African Americans and International Law: For Professor Goler Teal Butcher, with Appreciation”, 37 HOWARD L.J. 217 (1994). 4

2008 Book Review, 88 A.J.I.L. 852 (1994);“HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE NEW WORLD ORDER”, by Chandra Muzaffar. The Effects of the New World Order on the Third World, (Chairman’s Remarks), proceedings of the 87th Annual Meeting, American Society of Int’l. Law, at 37 (Dec. 1993). “International Law Implications for the Transition in South Africa”, Proceedings of the Annual Meeting of The American Society of International Law (1992). “Recent Struggles for Democracy Under Protocols I and II to the Geneva Conventions”, 6 TEMPLE INT’L. & COMP. L.J. 13 (1993). “The International Implications of the Los Angeles Riots”, 70 DEN. U.L. REV. 213 (1993). “The Gulf Crisis and Afro-American interests Under International Law”, 87 AM. J. INT’L. L. 42 (Jan. 1993). “International Law and the Continuation of Sanctions Against South Africa,” 3 TEMPLE INT’L. & COMP. L.J. 249 (1989). “The Price of Namibian Independence”, FOCUS (March 1989), Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies. “The Right to Food: the International Human Rights Response”, HOWARD L.J. (1987). Comment, “Divestment of the Stock Portfolio of the (American) Society (of International Law)”, 81 A.J,I.L. 744 (1987). “The Obligation to Withdraw Recognition from Pretoria as the Government of South Africa”, 1 TEMPLE INT. & COMP. L . J . (1987). Participant, Founding Conference, New York, 1987, of U.S. - Soviet Lawyers for a New Organization of International Lawyers for Disarmament. “Perceptions of Apartheid in South Africa”, THE TEMPLE REVIEW, Winter 1986. “The Advent of the Temple International and Comparative Law Journal”, 1 TEMPLE INT. & COMP. L.J. 1 (1985). “Constitutive Questions in the Negotiations for Namibian Independence”, 78 A.J.I.L. 76 (1984). “U.S. Policy Toward Namibia: Weaknesses and Contradictions,” IV THE JURIST 18 (1982). “Self Determination, International Law and the South African Bantustan Policy,” 17 COLUMBIA J. OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW 185 (1978). Consulting Editor, BLACK LAW J., Issue on International Law, Summer 1977. “Black People, Technocracy and Legal Process: Thoughts, Fears and Goals,” in PUBLIC POLICY 5

2008 FOR THE BLACK COMMUNITY STRATEGIES AND PERSPECTIVES,

Barnett and Hefner, eds. (1976).

Review, Syz, INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS (1974), in AMER, L INT’L LAW, January (1976). “Between Law and Justice: Professor Bittker’s Case for Black Reparations,” 50 INDIANA L.J. 517 (1975). “Black Professors and the Integrity of American Legal Education,” BLACK L.J. IV, NO. 3 (1975). “Reflections on Education in International Law in Africa” DENVER J.OF INTERNATIONAL LAW AND POLICY, VOL. 4, NO. 2, p. 199 (1974). Review “African Penal Systems”, (Alan Milner ed.) 47 IND.L.J. 593 (1972). “Towards International Institutions of Black Communication,” UFAHAMU, (U.C.L.A.), Spring 1971. “Foreign Policy Decision Making and Social Change in Malawi,” in THE ADMINISTRATION OF SOCIAL CHANGE IN AFRICA, E. P. Morgan ed. 1971. “Crossroads for Law in Africa,” (with Paul 0. Proehl) 18 UCLA L.R. 219 (1970). “Speculations on the Relevance of International Law to the Needs of Black Southern Africa,” UFAHAMU, Spring 1970. “Malawi: Between Black and White Africa,” AFRICA REPORT, Spring 1970. Selected Conferences: Basic Human Needs and the New South African Constitution, Workshop, A Democratic Legal System for a New South Africa, National Conference in Support of the African National Congress and other Democratic Forces for a New South Africa, November 1992. Paper, “Progressive Issues in International Law”, Panel on International Law at Regional Law Professors of Color Conference, Howard University, November 1995. “International Law and Black Empowerment’, Paper presented in April 1996, at Conference on Black Lawyers and International Law, University of Cincinatti Law School. Selected Public Service: Active member of Litigation Committee, Southern Africa Project, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights under Law, Washington, D.C. Helped to lead the national drive against ABA Legislative Action Committee setting as a priority U.S. recognition of the South Africa homelands; action was denounced by President of A.B.A. and removed from Committee agenda. Various talks, teaching and panels on South Africa. 6

2008 The Urban League, Indianapolis, Indiana. Consultations and meetings in Washington on furthering Congressional legislative proposals for economic sanctions against South Africa. Active membership, meetings and memos in the American Society of International Law, Washington, D.C., including its Annual Meetings. Consultation and involvement with National Conference of Black Lawyers on various issues. Other various Africa related activities and appearances. Foreign policy adviser, Jesse Jackson campaign, Washington, D.C. 1984. Member of African Policy Committee and drafter of various papers for Mondale-Ferraro campaign, Washington, D.C. 1988. Member, Commission on Independence for Namibia; 2 trips to Namibia to monitor elections and peacekeeping process, 1990. Member, Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law Delegation to Monitor South African Election; two trips to South Africa to monitor election preparation and elections, 1994. Delegate and chair of working group, African Constitutional Rights and Human Rights Conference, Victoria Falls, Zimbabwe, 1994. Official Representative of the American Society of International Law to the Annual Meeting of the African Society of International & Comparative Law, Rustenburg, South Africa, 1995. Travel: Western Europe, Russia, Turkey, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Mexico, Cuba, West, East and Southern Africa. U.S. Government Related duties in Europe and Africa.

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