GħSL | Law Archives - The Third Eye https://thirdeyemalta.com/category/orgs/collabs/ghsl-law/ The Students' Voice Tue, 19 Apr 2022 17:54:17 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://i0.wp.com/thirdeyemalta.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/cropped-logoWhite-08-1.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 GħSL | Law Archives - The Third Eye https://thirdeyemalta.com/category/orgs/collabs/ghsl-law/ 32 32 140821566 Andrew Sciberras to lead GHSL for 2022\23 https://thirdeyemalta.com/andrew-sciberras-to-lead-ghsl-for-202223/ Tue, 19 Apr 2022 17:36:51 +0000 https://thirdeyemalta.com/?p=10504 Following GHSL‘s AGM, Andrew Sciberras has been elected to lead the executive team for the year 2022\23. The full executive list is as follows: President: [...]

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Following GHSL‘s AGM, Andrew Sciberras has been elected to lead the executive team for the year 2022\23.

The full executive list is as follows:

President: Andrew Sciberras
Vice-President: Katrina Borg Ferrando
Secretary General: Giuseppe Gatt
Financial Officer: Cristina Schembri
Public Relations Officer: Marelaine Formosa
Academic Officer: Philip Gatt
International Officer: Alessia Bonanno
Legal Aid Officer: Kimberly Axisa
Leisure Officer: Michael Gatt
Marketing Officer: Hayley Borg
Moot Court Officer: Laura Chetcuti Dimech
Policy Officer: Andrew Drago
Publications Officer: David Chetcuti Dimech
Resources Officer: Michaela Giorgio

Presidential Comment

I’m honoured to have been given the opportunity to lead this team of exceptional men and women who all wish to help law students in one way or another. I’m more than excited to see what the next year has to offer, and to see what ideas everyone has. I’d like to everyone who has shown support along the way, as without it I might not have arrived as where I am today.

The Third Eye wishes the new executive a fruitful year ahead!

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GħSL and Ministry of Justice join forces for a beach clean-up https://thirdeyemalta.com/ghsl-and-ministry-of-justice-join-forces-for-a-beach-clean-up/ Sun, 20 Oct 2019 13:52:44 +0000 https://thirdeyemalta.com/?p=4809 Owen Bonnici, Minister for Justice, Culture and Local Government joined GħSL this Saturday for a beach clean-up at Pretty Bay. The event was hosted by [...]

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Owen Bonnici, Minister for Justice, Culture and Local Government joined GħSL this Saturday for a beach clean-up at Pretty Bay.

The event was hosted by the Malta Law Student’s Society (GħSL) and welcomed the Minister as well as members of staff within the Ministry, and fellow law students.

Around 35 law students came together and gathered around forty bags of waste. The waste varied from cigarette buts, plastic bottles to organic waste and The Cleansing and Maintenance Division eventually gathered it. Minister Bonnici personally awarded certificates of participation to all those partook and congratulated GħSL for such taking such an initiative.

This event was one of many charity events GħSL’s Legal Aid Committee held this year, said GħSL President, Celine Cuschieri Debono.

Successive members of the Executive Boards have recognised the duty of this law student organisation to branch out of its comfort zone, but rather take a more active role within the society that we live in.

We encourage fellow student organisations, law students, as well as the general student body, to seek out further avenues for collaboration, with all interested bodies. We, students, are some of the most active members of our society, and it is high time that our charitable efforts expand further, and not simply remain within University and SixthForm grounds.

In turn, GħSL’s External Relations Officer Michela Galea Seychell stated that the role of the GħSL Legal Aid Committee was to be the charitable arm of the organisation.

As students, and as future members of the legal profession, we recognise that events such as the one of today do not only leave an immediate beneficial impact but also serves as a wake-up call to the rest of the student body to continuously strive towards a more proactive approach. Hopefully, this event will serve as the spark for further initiatives down the line.

GħSL also hopes that such a clean-up event will be used as a springboard for further discussion from an academic and policy point of view on the legal aspects related to waste management and other related issues.

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Is your right to academic research under threat? | GħSL https://thirdeyemalta.com/is-your-right-to-academic-research-under-threat/ Thu, 19 Sep 2019 09:44:29 +0000 https://thirdeyemalta.com/?p=4518 Do you think academic research is under attack? What if we told you doing a PhD can get you life in prison? Back in April [...]

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Do you think academic research is under attack? What if we told you doing a PhD can get you life in prison?

Back in April 2018, 31-year-old British student Matthew Hedges had just finished a two-week visit to the United Arab Emirates. Hedges conducted multiple interviews as part of his PhD on the effects of the Arab Spring on the Gulf States.

Minutes before heading back home, Hedges was arrested at Dubai International Airport. He was held in solitary confinement for six months, and accused of spying and providing confidential information to outside sources.

The Abu Dhabi court found Hedges guilty and sentenced him to life in prison.

Then-Prime Minister Theresa May, intelligence agencies such as MI6, and NGOs like Human Rights Watch criticised the trial. The UAE President eventually pardoned Hedges, and returned safely back home. Happy ending right? No; this attack on academic research is one of many stories that we have heard of over the past few years.

These attacks occur even within our supposedly democratic European borders.

A few years earlier, the Hungarian Parliament made it illegal “for some independent universities to operate. They required the approval from the Hungarian government to remain open.

This meant that the Hungarian government could ban universities by refusing to sign a continuation contract. Shortly after, the Hungarian Government passed a ban “on gender studies within higher education. The two Universities affected by this band, ELTE and the CEU, were given just 24 hours to respond.”

Meanwhile, Polish President Andrzej Duda signed a law that imposed five-year prison sentences on anyone who argued that Poland, or that the Polish people, were in any way responsible for Soviet or Nazi crimes. Israeli politicians, including Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, described this move as “a way to re-write history.”

Academics are trying to take a stand in favour of academic freedom.

Hungarian academic Daniela Crăciun and American academic Georgiana Mihut wrote a paper, entitled “Requiem for a Dream: Academic Freedom under Threat in Democracies”. They noted that “academic freedom in democratic countries is both a powerful indicator and a consequence of democratic decline. The protection of academic freedom represents an important societal tool for inclusiveness and guards against power abuses.”

“Teaching and researching freely ensure that history is not forgotten, and that the checks and balances necessary for a working democracy are maintained. Academic freedom is important for the wellbeing of universities, and that of the countries and regions in which they operate.”

The spirit of academic freedom, the never-ending pursuit of legal discourse and innovative thinking, is being threatened.

Student-run academic journals have proven their resilience and strength in this regard. What were once ambitious (if not overzealous) projects, are gradually becoming essential drivers for democracy. They fuel the most relevant, up-to-date and important debates in our society.

It is with this in mind that GħSL once again has embarked on its “Call for Submissions” campaign.

Our legal journal, “Id-Dritt”, is the only legal student-run journal on campus of its type. As it approaches its thirtieth edition this year, its importance more obvious than ever. Meanwhile, the GħSL Online Law Journal provides an opportunity for the law student body to sharpen their writing, to get an early taste of what researching, writing and publishing academic articles is all about.

In light of the present threats that academic writing is facing, GħSL invites the local law-student corps to get in touch with us, and submit their own ideas for publication.

It is only together that the innovative spirit of law and academic progress finds its feet. Together we can reach substantial influence on our policy makers, as well as our society in general.

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Suit Up! We’re going to Washington | GħSL https://thirdeyemalta.com/suit-up-were-going-to-washington-ghsl/ Tue, 30 Oct 2018 16:46:24 +0000 https://thirdeyemalta.com/?p=2912   Calling all law students! For the second year running, GħSL is giving you the opportunity to participate in the JESSUP International Law Moot Court [...]

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Calling all law students! For the second year running, GħSL is giving you the opportunity to participate in the JESSUP International Law Moot Court Competition in Washington DC this April 2019!

 

The 2018 – 2019 version of Jessup will be the 60th edition of the annual Moot Court Competition. The Competition is based on a simulation of a fictional dispute between countries before the International Court of Justice; the judicial organ of the United Nations.

To all the motivated law students, this is an opportunity of a lifetime not to be missed!

The best 2 teams of 2 will be chosen to represent Malta in the International rounds, from a local moot court competition. The local rounds will be organised by GħSL and will take place from the 14th to the 15th of November 2018.

The 2019 International Rounds will take place between 31st March – 6th April 2019 and will conclude with the Jessup Cup World Championship Round. The Competition itself spans over an entire week and the sessions will include competitive matches, panel discussions as well as social events.

Last year was Malta’s first ever participation and the results were quite satisfactory. Although we did not place within the topmost countries, we managed to overcome other relatively established universities, such as the University of California, Berkeley.

The students representing Malta had a huge load of work to do in comparison to other universities as it was disproportionate to their team size.

They had to collectively draft and submit more than 24,000 words, as well as just under one hour of verbal submissions. This year, funds permitting, GħSL would like to nominate two groups of two students each; one group representing the applicant, and the other for the defendant. In this way, each group will be able to focus on one aspect of the case, and in this way allow more time to focus, develop solid argumentation, as well as lessen the stress on the participants.

There was also the lack of a professional lawyer as a mentor/tutor for the whole group from Malta in comparison with other universities.

Should funds permit, this year GħSL will attempt to contact and offer a lawyer, specialising in International Law, to join GħSL in Washington to assist the teams throughout the competition.

 

Take the opportunity. Represent Malta. Make University of Malta proud. Let the moot courts begin!

 

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