Brooke Goldstein
Brooke Goldstein | |
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Interests | Lawfare Project |
Brooke Goldstein is a human rights lawyer. She is the founder and Executive Director of the Lawfare Project.
Contents
Early life and education
Brooke Goldstein was born and raised in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. She is a graduate of McGill University and the Benjamin N Cardozo School of Law.[1][2]
Her grandfather was a commander in a unit of Polish partisans that fought against the Nazis.[3]
Career
The Making of A Martyr
CNN anchor Carol Costello describes Goldstein as "a woman on a mission" who travelled to the West Bank, "as a young law student," to film the 2006 documentary film "The Making of A Martyr".[4] Goldstein produced and directed the film about a Palestinian sixteen-year-old, Hussam Abdo, who was stopped at an Israeli border checkpoint when guards found live explosives wrapped around his body. Goldstein argues that that Palestinian activists, by encouraging suicide bombing, abuse the rights of Palestinian children. Goldstein calls the use of children as suicide bombers, "the intentional murder of innocent children."
Goldstein asserts that there are "Muslim children throughout the globe that are being targeted through the internet, through satellite programming, by the religious clerics, by the political leaders to kill themselves as suicide bombers. And it is nothing but a form of child abuse."[5]
Children's Rights Institute
Continuing her work from the film, in 2007 Goldstein founded the Children's Rights Institute, "a non-profit organisation that tracks and legally combats violations of children's basic human rights, with a special focus on child suicide-homicide bombers, child soldiers, and the phenomenon of human shields."[6]
The Lawfare Project
Goldstein founded the Lawfare Project in 2010,[7][8] an American nonprofit advocacy organisation based in New York City which serves as a legal think tank and litigation fund to uphold the civil and human rights of the Jewish people and pro-Israel community worldwide.[9][10]
Goldstein co-authored the 2011 book "Lawfare: The War Against Free Speech: A First Amendment Guide for Reporting in an Age of Islamist Lawfare." The book offers advice to journalists about how to protect themselves against what Goldstein and Meyer describe as "'Islamist lawfare,' the use of the law as a weapon of war to silence and punish free speech about militant Islam, terrorism and its sources of financing."[11]
Prior to the Lawfare Project, Goldstein worked for the Middle East Forum for two years, directing the organisation's "Legal Project" program, "which arranges pro-bono and reduced rate council for people wrongfully sued for speaking about issues of national security," particularly terrorism and Islamic extremism.
References
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- ↑ Kittrie, Orde (2016). Lawfare: Law as a Weapon of War. Oxford University Press. p. 9. ISBN 0190263571.Page Module:Citation/CS1/styles.css must have content model "Sanitized CSS" for TemplateStyles (current model is "Scribunto").
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