Friday, April 10, 2026

CfP and Brief Reflections: "Repositioning Criminal Justice: Critical Reimaginings"

 

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The ancient contests over the goals and methods of criminal justice remains as contested as ever (see, e.g, here). The traditional binary--criminal justice as punitive and as rehabilitative has been enriched by  its ingestion of theory: natural law, critical theoretics, and identity lens (gender, race, nationality, ethnicity), over which frameworks grounded in battles over the meaning and character of foundational ordering principles (justice, privilege, bias, etc.) have added not just nuance to the micro-issue (justice and the individual) but also macro-issues (the structure and power relationships within social an political collectives through a variety of cognitive bases (gender, race, migratory status, etc.), to seek to "reposition" criminal justice, then, requires a deeper engagement in the now complex theoretical and functional (on the ground realities) foundations and structures that infuse debates around shifting from punitive, incarceration-focused models to systems prioritizing community investment, safety, and equity--and vice versa. The further complication, of course is that each of these terms are historically contingent, contextually variable, and the product of values based signification that produces states of discourse in which words  are invested with different meanings, values, and locations in normative systems that measure meaning against their own yardsticks. 

At one position in the spectrum, one might encounter critical reforms that can include abolishing cash bail, reducing pretrial detention, implementing restorative justice, and investing in community resources like mental health services. This approach is conceptualized within cognitive cages that start with the assumption of corrupting forces (race, gender, ethnicity, class (though this one tends to draw far more anemic interest), religion and the like) that embed apparently neutral systems with bias that must be systematically confronted and dismantled. In that context criminal reform is consequential rather than primary--the evidence if dismantling which remains the primary general object. The discourse tends to revolve around its effects in carcereal ecologies: mass incarceration, transitioning towards a system that supports rehabilitation, reentry, and addressing the root causes of crime. At the opposite end of the spectrum one might encounter criminal reforms that are grounded in the moral virtues of punishment and of the protection of society against the systemicity  of abuses of process and the moral force of the criminal law to effectively serve the collective. Rather than hold society accountable for incarceration, this lens inverts the analysis, starting from the premise that public safety ought to be foregrounded and that individuals ought to be held accountable for their behavior--especially those which the society, through law, has sought to suppress. The focus is on social stability and the avoidance of chaos. On the ground these are manifested in the obsession with crime statistics but from an perspective that may be the opposite (or at least discursively incomprehensible or anathema) to those applying a critical lens: public safety in criminal reform focusing on upholding justice, deterrence of future crimes, and ensuring incapacitation of dangerous individuals (as judged by society through its laws). Collective equality tends to be its driver in functional terms--proportional sentencing (with furious debate over and against what one measures proportionality), the value of incarceration as a tool for enhancing collective public safety through incarceration, and the moral value of a public facing (and internalized) embrace of retributive principles. While critical approaches focus on reforming systems (that are corrupted), moral/justice approaches focus on reforming or punishing the individual (who is corrupted). Depending on the starting point, then, the elaboration of analysis, judgment and proposals for assessment and reform will necessarily take very different pathways. 

It is with that in mind that I am delighted pleased to share a call for papers for an upcoming edited collection, Repositioning Criminal Justice: Critical Reimaginings.

This collection explores how criminal justice systems construct and respond to gender—particularly the ways women are othered, criminalised, and shaped by legal and institutional frameworks. We welcome contributions that engage critically with gendered issues in criminal justice from a range of theoretical perspectives, including (but not limited to) Marxist, post/decolonial, socio-legal, critical race, psychoanalytic, and critical legal studies approaches .

Submission details:Abstract (150–200 words) due: 15 May 2026
Full chapter (8,000–9,000 words) due: 26 February 2027

If you are interested in contributing, please send a draft title, abstract, and affiliation to m.beatrice@deakin.edu.au.

CfP follows below. 

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Collaboration in Partnership with the African Telecommunications Union: Africa Technology Policy Tracker

 

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The  Carnegie Endowment for International Peace in Collaboration in Partnership with the African Telecommunications Union have created the Africa Technology Policy Tracker.  This is described as the "first ever continent-wide aggregate of digital economy laws, policies and regulations in Africa" (here).

AfTech is a research and policy tool that advances evidence-based policymaking in Africa’s rapidly evolving digital economy by providing a one-stop repository of national and continental technology frameworks. By cataloging policies across key pillars like digital infrastructure, platforms, skills, and innovation, AfTech makes it easy to explore, compare, and analyze policy actions shaping the continent’s digital future. AfTech offers valuable insights into the diverse approaches countries are taking toward digital governance. Our aim is to enhance visibility on the burgeoning digital policy environment in Africa and for AfTech to become an essential resource that informs decisionmaking, fosters cross-border collaboration, and helps guide the continent toward a more integrated and resilient digital economy. (here).

The focus is on development. This aligns both with the Chinese focus on socialist modernization with atonality characteristics organized around its global programs (the genesis of which was the Belt & Road Initiative) and the America First focus on development through bilateral transactions in markets that expand both production and capacity n home and host states. 

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 The spreadsheet of laws and regulations may be download HERE

Jane Munga has also prepared an accompanying policy brief: Africa’s Digital Infrastructure Imperative. The Introduction and "Key Takeaways" follows below.

Thursday, April 09, 2026

Changing the Narrative Parameters of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Projects Through Government Procurement, President Trump Issues Executive Order: "Addressing DEI Discrimination by Federal Contractors"

 

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President Trump campaigned against, and made good on that campaign theme very early in his 2nd Administration by issuing his executive order,  Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity (Executive Order 14173 of January 21, 2025; 90 FR 8633). It was grounded in a counter-narrative of discrimination and restorative programs designed, one would hope in all cases, to enhance  solidarity among all people in a political community wit respect, at least, to engagement, opportunity, and public spaces. It was one that saw in the evolution of the narratives of solidarity with origins in the 20th century (in contemporary form) a wrong turn that required correction. 

Longstanding Federal civil-rights laws protect individual Americans from discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, or national origin. These civil-rights protections serve as a bedrock supporting equality of opportunity for all Americans. As President, I have a solemn duty to ensure that these laws are enforced for the benefit of all Americans. Yet today, roughly 60 years after the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, critical and influential institutions of American society, including the Federal Government, major corporations, financial institutions, the medical industry, large commercial airlines, law enforcement agencies, and institutions of higher education have adopted and actively use dangerous, demeaning, and immoral race- and sex-based preferences under the guise of so-called “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) or “diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility” (DEIA) that can violate the civil-rights laws of this Nation. Illegal DEI and DEIA policies not only violate the text and spirit of our longstanding Federal civil-rights laws, they also undermine our national unity,* * * (90 FR 8633 §1)

This counter narrative was viewed as a threat, actually an offensive anathema, and a fundamental betrayal by those invested in the orthodox narrative. It still is. But the holders of that counter narrative, for the first time in a long time, are no longer in power. And the power of narrative is, at least within the political society of this Republic, to some extent a function of popular will expressed, as this society has determined to be best and most in accord with its norms, traditions, and expectations, through elections. Yet even that is no longer entirely true--narrative and its compulsory effect on law and expectation is now as much a creature of the hermeneutics of the courts as it is a creature of the exercise of discretionary choices by elected and representative officials. None of this is either good or bad as such; nonetheless it does illustrate the power and passion of the concept of DEI and the contests over its meaning by those with the power to influence and manage communal meaning making and the constructs of pathways to decisions and structures built on those meanings. 

The object of that Executive Order was meant to start the process of detaching the practices of the State from the operationalization of DEI within its structures and from policy initiatives that were meant to project those structures  outward to the social sphere. But mostly it continued a conversation better known for its heat and the rigidity of positions (as well as for the social and economic consequences of taking sides, or failing to do so) than for engagement and discourse. 

Still, there is nothing like policy to spice up conversations o of this kind.  That insight, drawn as much from the action of the Biden Administration as the Trump Administration (though to different ends), has now produced an addition to the 2025 EO,  "Addressing DEI Discrimination by Federal Contractors" on targeting more specifically the federal procurement process.  

 My Administration has made significant progress in ending racial discrimination in American society, including so-called “diversity, equity, and inclusion” (DEI) activities in which employees, applicants, or contracting parties are treated differently, separated, or singled out based on their race or ethnicity, rather than treated equally and objectively based on their merit and without regard to their immutable characteristics. Despite this progress, some entities continue to engage in DEI activities and often attempt to conceal their efforts to do so. * * * DEI activities also create unnecessary costs by reducing the pool of available labor by artificially limiting companies to hiring or promoting certain individuals, suppliers, or intermediaries based on their race or ethnicity. These costs are inevitably passed on to the Federal Government when it contracts with companies who engage in racially discriminatory DEI activities, or who use subcontractors who do so. ("Addressing DEI Discrimination by Federal Contractors" §1)

The tonic for this trouble, as the DEI narrative has it, requires the same medicine as the Biden Administration administered, though in the opposite direction--compliance and administrative oversight built into procurement contracts ("Addressing DEI Discrimination by Federal Contractors" §3). This one has teeth: Section 4 provides that "Contracting agencies shall: (i)   cancel, terminate, suspend, or cause to be cancelled, terminated, or suspended, any contract or contract-like instrument, or any portion or portions thereof, for failure of the contractor or subcontractor to comply with the clause described in section 3 of this order* * *. For a useful discussion of both EO's see HERE

This contest of cognitive structures around social and collective equity is far form over. It is clear, though, that neither side can take for granted the orthodoxy of their position, and both have work to do to embed their on the national collective--at least as a matter of official cognitive frameworks. 

The text of the Executive Orders follows.

 

Wednesday, April 08, 2026

Congressional-Executive Commission on China (CECC) Event: "Dark Nets, Illicit Labor—Confronting China’s IUU Fishing and Seafood Supply Chain"

 

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 The Congressional-Executive Commission on China was created by the U.S. Congress in 2000 "with the legislative mandate to monitor human rights and the development of the rule of law in China, and to submit an annual report to the President and the Congress. The Commission consists of nine Senators, nine Members of the House of Representatives, and five senior Administration officials appointed by the President." (CECC About). The CECC FAQs provide useful information about the CECC. See CECC Frequently Asked Questions. They have developed positions on a number of issues.

CECC tends to serve as an excellent barometer of the thinking of political and academic elites in the United States about issues touching on China and the official American line developed in connection with those issues. As such it is an important source of information about the way official and academic sectors think about China. As one can imagine many of the positions of the CECC are critical of current Chinese policies and institutions (for some analysis see CECC).

CECC periodically organizes events that are meant to foreground issues and relationship areas with China that are of greater importance. To those ends, CECC has announced a hearing on fishing dual purpose fishing fleets and their projection of  the power of resource exploitation in and around the territorial waters of foreign states. It is entitled:  "Dark Nets, Illicit Labor—Confronting China’s IUU Fishing and Seafood Supply Chain." It is particularly interesting for the way ion which the hearing is meant to suggest fishing as a point of intersection of environmental, sovereignty, and human rights issuers. It is also meant to spotlight the way that the US will respond under the policy premises of America First. CECC has described the hearing this way:

Thursday, April 16, 2026 10:00 am
562 Dirksen Senate Office Building

Event Type: Hearing

The PRC has expanded its use of subsidized and aggressive illegal, unreported, and unregulated (IUU) fishing practices, threatening maritime security globally, distorting seafood markets, harming U.S. economic interests, and enabling serious human rights abuses in the seafood supply chain. This hearing will examine the economic, human rights, and strategic implications of the Chinese Communist Party’s role in IUU fishing and illicit labor in the seafood sector, including the use of Uyghur and North Korean forced labor in processing facilities and on distant-water fishing vessels.

This hearing will focus on (1) use of forced labor in China’s fishing fleets and the enforcement of existing laws on forced labor imports and Withhold Release Orders targeting those fleets; (2) the strategic and economic implications of the PRC’s IUU fishing practices and the current U.S. response; (3) U.S. efforts to support allies and partners in combating IUU fishing and strengthening enforcement on the high seas, and (4) the transfer and exploitation of Uyghur and North Korean labor in China-based seafood production and on PRC-linked fishing vessels. The hearing will also explore policy options to strengthen U.S. enforcement capacity, protect American markets from illegal seafood, and advance bipartisan legislative initiatives such as the FISH Act.

The hearing will be livestreamed on the CECC’s YouTube channel. Witnesses:

Ian Urbina, Director and Founder of The Outlaw Ocean Project; RADM Scott Clendenin (Ret), Owner, Dog Zebra Solutions, LLC.

For those unable to attend, the hearing will be livestreamed via the CECC’s YouTube Channel.

Pix Credit The Guardian

 

Posting Discussion Draft: "The Conceptual Architecture of America First—Ideological Transactionalism and the Case of Cuba"

 

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But here’s what this really means. It means that like millions and millions of Americans, President Trump loves this country and wants to see it do well in the world – not at the expense of others, but to the benefit of our people, and by extension, the nations that share our values and our strategic goals. It’s really that simple. If there is a natural law of foreign policy, this is it. And while he wishes every country enjoyed the freedoms we enjoy here, he has no aspiration to use force to spread the American model. You can see it in the administration’s record of its using force. I can prove it to you. And so – and so importantly − he believes America is exceptional – a place and history apart from normal human experience, the ones that our Founders spoke about. President Trump believes it is right – indeed more than right – for America to unashamedly advance policy that serves our interests and reflects American ideals. (Applause.) Certainly, our course of action in this administration reflects a gut-level – a gut-level – for love of country. But taking the pursuit of America’s interests up a notch is not just honorable; it’s urgent in this new era of great power competition. (Michael P. Pompeo, "A Foreign Policy From the Founding," Speech delivered at the Claremont Institute 40th Anniversary Gala , Beverly Wilshire Hotel, Beverly Hills, California, May 11, 2019)

I am happy to share with those interested the roughed out discussion draft of an article: The Conceptual Architecture of America First—Ideological Transactionalism and the Case of Cuba. The question considered goes to the ordering premises within which it is possible to rationalize and order our social and political systems--something that had been more or less stable since the middle of the last century:

How does one reboot the now traditional discursive tropes of sovereignty and the state system, one deeply embedded in the culture of States and memorialized initially in the Montevideo Convention of 1933, and one grounded in the protection of the internal affairs by states by others, sovereign equality, territorial integrity, and self-determination; how does one engage in this sort of reboot in a context where the discursive tropes of sovereignty, have been dissipated by globalization--everyone, multinational enterprises (economic and societal, Apple Inc., and Amnesty Int'l), perhaps now have varying "rights" to auto-determination, if not territory; how does one do that rebooting where those old discursive tropes may now be perhaps dispositively displaced by the discourse of the transformation of the ordering premises of the global from one foregrounding institutions, management, and bureaucratic ordering within hierarchically arranged systems, to one embedded within an ethos of transactional discourse and the values that discourse represents?

These are, indeed, a longish set of questions. They are perhaps also better understood as a challenge (for states and others) as the primary contradiction of international relations shifts from one grounded in the perfection of States, their system and their language/values (through Rule of Law infused tropes, to one in which merchants rather than bureaucrats might be more comfortable. It is made more difficult because even the old terms acquire ambiguity in the contemporary Cuban context (auto-determination including the Cuban diaspora?; for example).

Here is the abstract:

Since 2016 the conceptual basis of the foreign relations architecture of the United States has experienced a profound dialectic. On the one side is the contemporary product of a long evolution of conceptual premises that are grounded in the orienting conception of an institutional state overseen by an expert techno bureaucracy in the service of institutions around which political, economic, social, and cultural life is organized both domestically and in relations with other similarly organized institutions in the public and private sphere. This had produced both the deeply institutionally integrated systems of international organizations and of economic globalization around which the rules based legal order operated. On the other side were forces of opposition to this vision that emerged in a dominant form with the election of President Trump in 2016 and again in 2024. This oppositional vision was grounded in a rejection of centering the organization of collective life around and through institutions. It did not reject institutions as such; it sought to refocus the driving force of social organization from institutions to the transactions that with respect to which institutions and other actors. While this possible cognitive shift appears at first blush to be one of emphasis, its consequences can be significant. This essay has two objectives. The first is to sketch out the current framework of conceptual transactionalism around which America First is evolving. The second is to consider its application in the case of the Cuban crisis of 2026.

       

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CONTENTS:

 

I. Introduction: Situating Cuba and the Caribbean Within America First

 

2. The Cognitive and Analytical Age that is America First.

A. Cognitive Typologies Need Archetypes: The "Merchant" () and the "Bureaucrat" ()

B. The Primary Sources

                  i. National Security Strategy of the United States for 2025 (November 2025) [NSS 2025].

                  ii. U.S. Department of State Agency Strategic Plan Fiscal Years 2026-2030 (January 2026)

                  iii. The 2026 National Defense Strategy

                  iv. Remarks of Secretary of State Marco Rubio at the Munich Security Conference.

C. The Parameters of Perception, Analysis and Policy.

i. Donald Trump, Presidential Memorandum: Withdrawing the United States from International Organizations.

ii. Marco Rubio, 100 Days of an America First State Department.

3. The Merchant/Transactional Approach to the problem of Cuba in 2026.

A. Prelude: The Merchant/Transactional Approach to the Cuban Problem Projected Back into History

B. The Template: Venezuela 2026.

C. Cuba Within the Transactional Institutional Lens.

 

4. Conclusions.

 The discussion draft may be accessed HERE: America_First_Cuba_Transition_2026.

The Introduction and Conclusion follow below. 

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Tuesday, April 07, 2026

Online Event: “To Dare Mighty Things: The U.S. Restless Defense Strategy Then and Now" Dr. Michael O'Hanlon in conversation with Dr. Klaus Larres

 



  Dr Klaus Larres, Richard M Krasno Distinguished Professor of History & International Affairs at the University of North Carolina (UNC) at Chapel Hill, USA, and the Director of the Krasno Global Affairs & Business Council/Krasno Global Events Series has announced another in its Krasno Global Events Series at UNC-Chapel Hill. This time the event is organized as a conversation with Dr. Michael O'Hanlon, a foreign and defence policy expert from the Brookings Institution in Washington, DC. It is scheduled to take place 9 April 2026 and is sure to be of interest to some. 

It is an online event only. 

 ZOOM LINK: https://zoom.us/j/98072415115 (no registration or RSVP necessary)

The topic of the conversation is "“To Dare Mighty Things: The U.S. Restless Defense Strategy Then and Now" and is crafted around his book, “To Dare Mighty Things: U.S. Defense Strategy Since the Revolution” which is scheduled for release on the 250th anniversary of the founding of the Republic. 

My own take on the current NDS strategy may be accessed here (Fleshing Out the America First Framework as Peace Through Strength Projections: Brief Reflections on the 2026 National Defense Strategy (US Department of War January 2026)); thoughts on the current NDS as an integral part of the America First project may be accessed here (The Conceptual Architecture of America First—Ideological Transactionalism and the Case of Cuba (discussion draft)).  

More information follows below.  

OMFIF Conference: The Americas transition finance summit




The Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF) is now circulating its quite interesting notice of  an upcoming event: The Americas transition finance summit. The Press Release described it like this:
2026 may prove to be a pivotal year for transition finance. As we approach 2030, it is clear that countries around the world must step up their commitments to limiting the impacts of climate change. The Americas transition finance summit, hosted by OMFIF and Bolsa Institucional de Valores, is a platform for advancing credible, investable pathways to net zero.  Taking place in Mexico City, the summit convenes leaders from asset management, private equity, public development banks, ministries of finance, central banks and corporatations from across the Americas to share expertise and find solutions to the challenges of the green transition. Through a series of panel discussions and keynote addresses, the summit examines the mindset of investors as they look for diversification, risk management considerations, policy and market architecture, and successful transition finance case studies in the region.
Registration may be accessed HERE.



Just Posted: "Legal-Institutional Foundations for Reconstruction in a Post-Revolutionary Cuba: A Conceptual Exercise"

 

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I am delighted to share a recently posted essay: Legal-Institutional Foundations for Reconstruction in a Post-Revolutionary Cuba: A Conceptual Exercise (March 2026), which will appear in the Cuba in Transition, 2025 Proceedings of the Annual Conference of the Association for the Study of the Cuban economy. It may be accessed HERE.

Here is the abstract:

Cuba is certainly in transition. But that means very different things to groups competing to drive transition. The resulting dissonance, guided by sometimes incompatible formative premises, complicates the challenge of transition, its forms, where that transition leads, and what may be necessary. Whatever the form and trajectories of transition, it is clear that transition will require substantial attention to the construction of aligned institutional-legal foundations. The purpose of these remarks is to consider the form and challenges of developing robust institutional-legal foundations in the Cuban context. It is organized in five parts. After the introduction the remarks first considers conceptual starting points-the importance of the development and choice of political-economic models as a predicate for the construction of robust institutional-legal foundations. It is divided into two parts, the first focusing on normative political orders, and the second examining institutional-legal orders. The remarks then considers two starting points of analysis. The first situates the Cuban political-economic model as a conceptual baseline. The second the current state of institutional-legal foundations in Cuba. The remarks then articulates the context in which the challenge of transition appears in contemporary Cuba-the end of the long arc of the Cuba revolutionary regime. That brings the remarks to the heart of the matter: what the future can bring. This is divided into several organizing-normative questions: (a) Who is to make decisions about transitioning?; (b) What ideological political economic model is to serve as the basis of post-revolutionary institutional-law building?; (c) Through which institutional actors ought this ideological politicaleconomic model be realized?; (d) What timeline is to be chosen to develop and implement this transition?; and (e) The Marie Kondo moment-what of the present system is to be kept and what is to be discarded or repurposed?

 The Introduction follows below

Sunday, April 05, 2026

Life and Death: The U.S. Presidential Message on Easter and the Easter Homily of Pope Leo XIV

 

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In a way that reflects the essence of the end of Holy Week, U.S. President Trump issued his Easter Statement and  Pope Leo XIV his Easter Homily.  

The Pope focused on the mortal fear of and liberation from death. But this is not a death of the body he was speaking to; he was speaking to the power of death over mortals. "Death has been conquered forever; death no longer has power over us!" Death becomes a semiotic signific for the human condition. "From within, this power threatens us when the weight of our sins prevents us from “spreading our wings” and taking flight, or when the disappointments or loneliness we experience drain our hope. . . From without, death is always lurking. We see it present in injustices, in partisan selfishness, in the oppression of the poor, in the lack of attention given to the most vulnerable." (Easter Homily).

The President spoke to restoration, release and victory for humans and their collectives. He spoke to the price of such restoration and release in terms of sacrifice. “Death is swallowed up in victory.”(quoting 1 Corinthians 15:54). The Vulgate makes it clearer, death has been absorbed (Absorpta est mors); the difference is telling--to swallow is to ingest into the body; to absorb is to digest that which is swallowed. The President spoke to that promise of salvation through resurrection not in the next life but in this as a victory that evidences that absorption of death; and not just as an individual engagement but one for the nation: "As we rejoice in this Easter season, we are reminded that the life of Jesus Christ and the truths of the Gospel have inspired our way of life and our national identity for 250 years. From the Christian patriots who won and secured our liberty on the battlefield and every generation since, the love of Christ has unfailingly guided our Nation through calm waters and dark storms."(Easter Statement).

But has death been ingested or digested? In what and how is that victory received. . . or embedded? It is on this note, the note of the dialectics between life and death; between the corruptible and the incorruptible; between the Kingdom of the flesh and  the Kingdom of God; between a victory that is swallowed and one that absorbs; it is about those dialectics that both men danced, and that calls for further reflection. It m then be that there is value in concluding this Easter greeting with the longer context of the passage to 1 Corinthians 15:50-42-55 to which the president quoted and to which the Pope alluded. The passage is from the King James version, which requires (now deliberately) more measured reading for the oscillating binaries that are at last resolved:

42So also is the resurrection of the dead. It is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption: 43It is sown in dishonour; it is raised in glory: it is sown in weakness; it is raised in power: 44It is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body. There is a natural body, and there is a spiritual body. 45And so it is written, The first man Adam was made a living soul; the last Adam was made a quickening spirit. 46Howbeit that was not first which is spiritual, but that which is natural; and afterward that which is spiritual. 47The first man is of the earth, earthy: the second man is the Lord from heaven. 48As is the earthy, such are they also that are earthy: and as is the heavenly, such are they also that are heavenly. 49And as we have borne the image of the earthy, we shall also bear the image of the heavenly.
50Now this I say, brethren, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God; neither doth corruption inherit incorruption. 51Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed, 52In a moment, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump: for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised incorruptible, and we shall be changed. 53For this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality. 54So when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. 55O death, where is thy sting? O grave, where is thy victory? 56The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law. 57But thanks be to God, which giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.
_____
42 sic et resurrectio mortuorum. Seminatur in corruptione, surget in incorruptione. 43 Seminatur in ignobilitate, surget in gloria: seminatur in infirmitate, surget in virtute: 44 seminatur corpus animale, surget corpus spiritale. Si est corpus animale, est et spiritale, sicut scriptum est: 45 Factus est primus homo Adam in animam viventem, novissimus Adam in spiritum vivificantem. 46 Sed non prius quod spiritale est, sed quod animale: deinde quod spiritale. 47 Primus homo de terra, terrenus: secundus homo de caelo, caelestis. 48 Qualis terrenus, tales et terreni: et qualis caelestis, tales et caelestes. 49 Igitur, sicut portavimus imaginem terreni, portemus et imaginem caelestis.

50 Hoc autem dico, fratres: quia caro et sanguis regnum Dei possidere non possunt: neque corruptio incorruptelam possidebit. 51 Ecce mysterium vobis dico: omnes quidem resurgemus, sed non omnes immutabimur. 52 In momento, in ictu oculi, in novissima tuba: canet enim tuba, et mortui resurgent incorrupti: et nos immutabimur. 53 Oportet enim corruptibile hoc induere incorruptionem: et mortale hoc induere immortalitatem. 54 Cum autem mortale hoc induerit immortalitatem, tunc fiet sermo, qui scriptus est: Absorpta est mors in victoria. 55 Ubi est mors victoria tua? ubi est mors stimulus tuus? 56 Stimulus autem mortis peccatum est: virtus vero peccati lex. 57 Deo autem gratias, qui dedit nobis victoriam per Dominum nostrum Jesum Christum. 58 Itaque fratres mei dilecti, stabiles estote, et immobiles: abundantes in opere Domini semper, scientes quod labor vester non est inanis in Domino.

The complete Easter Homily and Eater Presidential Statement follows below with links to the original posting. 

Saturday, April 04, 2026

Library of Congress--Cuban Law: Global Legal Collection Highlights

 

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In 2015, writing for the Library of Congress blogsKelly Buchanan, posted a guest post by Gustavo Guerra, a foreign law specialist at the Law Library of Congress on the Cuban Law collections available through the Library of Congress (Cuban Law – Global Legal Collection Highlights (). For those with an interest in the area I have re-posted that guest post below.  While some of the sources are now of historical interest, these may still be a great use for historians, policy makers and others. 

More generally the Library of Congress Webpage: Cuba: Hispanic Reading Room Country Guide, provides a portal to additional resources.