Background
Jackson, Donald Wilson was born on May 15, 1938 in Houston, Texas, United States. Son of Enoch Wilson and Ozella Rae Jackson.
(Essays assessing the impact of globalization on law and c...)
Essays assessing the impact of globalization on law and court systems across the world.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1438430701/?tag=2022091-20
( "Provocative not only in its own right but in terms of ...)
"Provocative not only in its own right but in terms of advancing discussion of the U.S. and international action on human rights. The author has read a large amount of material about the European Convention on Human Rights, from both primary and secondary sources. To this he has added material on U.S. and British constitutional law. The result is a stimulating and wide-ranging discussion."--David Forsythe, University of Nebraska Donald Jackson investigates the United Kingdom's surprisingly dismal record of violations of the European Convention on Human Rights. During the first thirty years of the European Court of Human Rights (1959-89), the UK was found in violation of the Convention more frequently than any other country, and its violations have continued apace in the 1990s. Jackson traces the source of the problem through the UK's lack of judicially enforceable rights law to the application of executive/bureaucratic discretion under UK law. In order to examine "discretion" in this context, Jackson focuses on various ways in which UK authorities have dealt with four specific issues: the problem of terrorism and of due process issues involved in the UK's efforts to counter it; the rights of inmates in UK prisons; problems of nationality and immigration; and freedom of expression, particularly that of the press relative to the conduct of trials and to national security issues. His study illuminates the interworkings of British democracy, political culture, and "officialdom." Jackson demonstrates the status and perception of the Convention in UK courts by concluding with an analysis of the references in UK judicial decisions to the European Convention on Human Rights. Having suggested the reasons why the UK legal and political establishments so often fail to recognize and enforce rights, Jackson goes on to review various proposals for the development of an effective rights document and enforcement mechanism in the UK. Donald W. Jackson is Herman Brown Professor of Political Science at Texas Christian University and author of a number of books, most recently Even the Children of Strangers: Equality under the U.S. Constitution (1992) and Presidential Leadership and Civil Rights Policy (coedited with James W. Riddlesperger, Jr., 1995).
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0813014875/?tag=2022091-20
lawyer political science professor
Jackson, Donald Wilson was born on May 15, 1938 in Houston, Texas, United States. Son of Enoch Wilson and Ozella Rae Jackson.
Bachelor, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, 1959. Juris Doctor, Southern Methodist University, 1962. Doctor of Philosophy in Political Science, University Wisconsin, Madison, 1972.
Associate Storey, Armstrong & Steger, Dallas, 1962—1966, partner, 1966—1967. Instructor political science Southern Methodist University, 1967—1968. Assistant professor political science Idaho State University, Pocatello, Idaho, 1970—1974.
Judicial fellow Supreme Court United States, Washington, 1974—1975. Herman Brown professor political science Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, since 1975, director Center for Civic Literacy, since 2006.
(Essays assessing the impact of globalization on law and c...)
( "Provocative not only in its own right but in terms of ...)
(Book by Jackson, Donald Wilson)
Board directors American Civil Liberties Union, New York City, 2000—2001, Quaker United National Committee, New York City, 1997—2000. Member advisory board American United for Separation of Church and State, Washington, 1995—2001, board trustees, since 2005, executive committee member, since 2006. Board directors Texas affiliate American Civil Liberties Union, Austin, 1992—2001.
Member of We. Political Science Association, International Political Science Association (secretary-treasurer 1997—2000, member research committee comparative judicial studies), American Political Science Association (secretary treasurer law and courts section 1996-1999), Phi Beta Kappa.
Married Joanne Shea, April 20, 1985. Children: Daniel Wilson, Michael Oden.