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Co-published by Oxford University Press and the International Law
Institute, and prepared by the Office of the Legal Adviser at the
Department of State, the Digest of United States Practice in
International Law presents an annual compilation of documents and
commentary highlighting significant developments in public and
private international law, and is an invaluable resource for
practitioners and scholars in the field.
Each year's volume compiles excerpts from documents such as
treaties, diplomatic notes and correspondence, legal opinion
letters, judicial decisions, Senate committee reports and press
releases. Each document is selected by members of the Legal
Adviser's Office of the U.S. Department of State, based on their
judgments about the significance of the issues, their potential
relevance to future situations, and their likely interest to
scholars and practitioners. In almost every case, the commentary to
each excerpt is accompanied by a citation to the full text.
Featured in the 2008 Digest are excerpts from and discussion of
numerous documents relating to issues of current interest,
including the following:
* Department of Justice position on trial and conviction within the
U.S. of the son of former Liberian president Charles Taylor, for
torture (Chapter 3, "International Criminal Law").
* The U.S.-Libya Claims Settlement Agreement, including the Libyan
Claims Resolution Act (enacted August 4, 2008) (Chapter 8,
"International Claims and State Responsibility").
* Recognition of Kosovo as a sovereign state and establishment of
diplomatic relations with Kosovo (Chapter 9, "Diplomatic Relations,
Succession, and Continuity of States").
* Decisions in arbitration regarding the softwood lumber dispute
with Canada (Chapter 11, "Trade, Commercial Relations, Investment,
and Transportation").
* Statements and speeches of U.S. officials on climate change made
at international climate change conferences (Chapter 13,
"Environment and Other Transnational Scientific Issues").
* Executive Orders imposing sanctions on Burma, Syria, and Zimbabwe
(Chapter 16, "Sanctions").
* U.S. positions on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict as well as
peace efforts in Lebanon, Somalia, and Sudan (Chapter 17,
"International Conflict Resolution and Avoidance").
* U.S. statements on the Russia-Georgia conflict and other
instances of international armed conflict (Chapter 18, "Use of
Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and Nonproliferation").
* U.S. positions on discussions of a possible Protocol to the
Convention on Conventional Weapons relating to cluster munitions,
and U.S. opposition to a separate Convention on Cluster Munitions
(Chapter 18, "Use of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and
Nonproliferation").
* U.S. federal court decisions on current and former Guantanamo
detainees (Boumediene v. Bush, Parhat v. Gates, Gates v. Bismullah,
Rasul v. Myers, and In re Guantanamo Bay Detainee Litigation
(pertaining to enemy combatant status of Uighur detainees)),
military commissions (United States v.Hamdan), detainees held in
the United States (Al-Marri v. Pucciarelli), and detainees held by
the Multinational Force in Iraq (Munaf v. Geren) (Chapter 18, "Use
of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and
Nonproliferation").
* UN Security Council Resolution and U.S. position on piracy in
Somalia (Chapter 18, "Use of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament,
and Nonproliferation").
* U.S. positions on nuclear nonproliferation-related issues,
including issues relating to North Korea, Iran, Syria, Russia, and
India (Chapter 18, "Use of Force, Arms Control and Disarmament, and
Nonproliferation").
 This is a story of mothers. This is a story of daughters.
This is a story of the trauma we carry and the trauma we tend to.
So begins this multigenerational memoir that explores the author's
maternal history of repeated trauma, separation, adverse childhood
experiences (ACES) and their impact on mental health. Set against a
twenty-year dialogue with her mother Barbara who suffers from long
undiagnosed PTSD, author Elizabeth Wilcox opens her maternal
history with the birth of her illegitimate grandmother Violet to a
German house servant outside London in 1904. With her mother's
encouragement, Wilcox goes on to trace the lives of her grandmother
Violet and her mother Barbara, both of whom are deeply impacted by
maternal separation and the complex trauma they have endured.
Violet undergoes multiple separations: from her mother until the
age of six, from her German Jewish stepfather during WWI at the age
of ten, and from her own three-year-old daughter Barbara when her
family escapes without her from Holland during Hitler's invasion.
Later put on a train to Wales with her eighteen-month-old brother
Neville during Operation Pied Piper, Barbara also tragically
endures an itinerant childhood characterized by maternal
separation, foster homes, boarding schools, and abuse. Through a
dual timeline that is both present day and historic, Wilcox weaves
together these documented and imagined voices of the women who
precede her, while using her experience as a journalist and writer
in the field of early childhood education and mental health to
explore the impact of adverse childhood experiences on adult
wellbeing and mental health. Through her work and her mother
Barbara who has successfully raised seven children despite her
difficult past, Wilcox also shows what it means to parent with
intention, forgiveness and unconditional love.
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