Emmanuel Didier
POSTES OCCUPÉS / PROFESSIONAL FUNCTIONS HELD:
- Premier Secrétaire, Cour internationale de Justice / First Secretary, International Court of Justice
- Commissaire, Commission de l'Immigration et du Statut de Réfugié / Commissioner, Immigration and Refugee Board
- Avocat : barreaux de l'Ontario et de New York (anciennement Québec et Nouveau-Brunswick) / Attorney at Law: Bars of Ontario and New York (formerly Quebec and New Brunswick)
- Conseiller juridique au Gouvernement du Canada (Affaires Extérieures, Justice) / Legal Counsel, Government of Canada (Foreign Affairs, Justice)(
- Avocat en pratique privée / Attorney in private practice
- Professeur de droit / Professor of Law
- Sous-chef des Services linguistiques de la Banque du Canada / Deputy-Head, Linguistic Services, Bank of Canada
- diverses fonctions dans le renseignement militaire / various roles in military intelligence
- Member of the Board of Project Abraham and Yazidi Legal Network, supporting Yazidi refugees
- Member of Somali Canadian Youth Center, supporting Somali immigrants
FORMATION / TRAINING:
- Docteur d'État en Droit (Paris I - Sorbonne) / PhD in Law (Paris I - Sorbonne)
- Diplôme d'Études Approfondies (DEA), droit international public et privé, Université de Nice
- Bachelor of Civil Law (McGill University)
- Bachelor of Laws (McGill University)
Phone: 16136978603
- Premier Secrétaire, Cour internationale de Justice / First Secretary, International Court of Justice
- Commissaire, Commission de l'Immigration et du Statut de Réfugié / Commissioner, Immigration and Refugee Board
- Avocat : barreaux de l'Ontario et de New York (anciennement Québec et Nouveau-Brunswick) / Attorney at Law: Bars of Ontario and New York (formerly Quebec and New Brunswick)
- Conseiller juridique au Gouvernement du Canada (Affaires Extérieures, Justice) / Legal Counsel, Government of Canada (Foreign Affairs, Justice)(
- Avocat en pratique privée / Attorney in private practice
- Professeur de droit / Professor of Law
- Sous-chef des Services linguistiques de la Banque du Canada / Deputy-Head, Linguistic Services, Bank of Canada
- diverses fonctions dans le renseignement militaire / various roles in military intelligence
- Member of the Board of Project Abraham and Yazidi Legal Network, supporting Yazidi refugees
- Member of Somali Canadian Youth Center, supporting Somali immigrants
FORMATION / TRAINING:
- Docteur d'État en Droit (Paris I - Sorbonne) / PhD in Law (Paris I - Sorbonne)
- Diplôme d'Études Approfondies (DEA), droit international public et privé, Université de Nice
- Bachelor of Civil Law (McGill University)
- Bachelor of Laws (McGill University)
Phone: 16136978603
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Videos by Emmanuel Didier
Conference Presentations by Emmanuel Didier
- a model, and
- an opportunity to generate debate
about cognition, its relevance in law and its expression in law: juripragmatics
It is based on 5 general themes:
- introduction to cognitive operations: how we perceive the world
- the theory of mind: how we understand other people
- prediction: how we act in the world
- interoception: how we feel about ourselves
- relevance for legal discourse and legal operations
But an astonishingly similar common path: judicial enforcers of pitiless and genocidal dictatorships.
Born in bourgeoisie, trained as lawyers, political opponents of the old regime who joined the victorious Patron in order to eliminate the old elites and the present opposition and to establish a new legal order.
They began as enforcers but quickly became architects of tyranny by making themselves indispensable to their Patron thanks to
- deep knowledge of the judicial system,
- enormous work capacity,
- mastery of language,
- commitment to the powers-in-existence, and
- crushing personal ambitions.
They wrote extensively: pleadings, judgments, laws, regulations, treatises and courses justifying, orienting and rooting legally the dictatorships.
Dictatorships use eight basic tools in order to tame the Judiciary:
- exceptional laws;
- competition between the judiciary and political police;
- purging of the Courts;
- court packing;
- limitation of jurisdictions;
- creation of special jurisdictions;
- persuasion; and
- conditioning of legal minds.
Fouquier-Tinville, Vyschinsky and Freisler acted with the 8 tools,
- as enforcers in the special courts, and
- as organizers of mass murders conducted by the State
A phenomenon not limited in time or geographically:
Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, ISIS
But an astonishingly similar common path: judicial enforcers of pitiless and genocidal dictatorships.
Born in bourgeoisie, trained as lawyers, political opponents of the old regime who joined the victorious Patron in order to eliminate the old elites and the present opposition and to establish a new legal order.
They began as enforcers but quickly became architects of tyranny by making themselves indispensable to their Patron thanks to
- deep knowledge of the judicial system,
- enormous work capacity,
- mastery of language,
- commitment to the powers-in-existence, and
- crushing personal ambitions.
They wrote extensively: pleadings, judgments, laws, regulations, treatises and courses justifying, orienting and rooting legally the dictatorships.
Dictatorships use eight basic tools in order to tame the Judiciary:
exceptional laws;
- competition between the judiciary and political police;
- purging of the Courts;
- court packing;
- limitation of jurisdictions;
- creation of special jurisdictions;
- persuasion; and
- conditioning of legal minds.
Fouquier-Tinville, Vyschinsky and Freisler acted with the 8 tools,
- as enforcers in the special courts, and
- as organizers of mass murders conducted by the State
A phenomenon not limited in time or geographically: Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, ISIS
Yazidis - Yezidis - Yézidis - Ezidis by Emmanuel Didier
1. the cognitive, social and economic consequences of the traumatic stress experienced by Yazidi survivors, especially women, in consequence of the genocide inflicted on them by DAESH; and
2. the measures to be taken to support their rehabilitation and cicatrization.
Int'l Criminal Law / Droit pénal int'l by Emmanuel Didier
Description du risque dans les processus d'immigration et de demande d'asile, notamment pour l'Évaluation du risque avant renvoi.
Juripragmatics / Juripragmatique by Emmanuel Didier
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
The lists of metaphors and metonymies I found or compiled for the article.
ABSTRACT:
Metaphor and metonymy are not mere tropes, but instruments for reasoning in law and about law. Another illustration that Law is a cognitive tool created by homo sapiens.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
- a model, and
- an opportunity to generate debate
about cognition, its relevance in law and its expression in law: juripragmatics
It is based on 5 general themes:
- introduction to cognitive operations: how we perceive the world
- the theory of mind: how we understand other people
- prediction: how we act in the world
- interoception: how we feel about ourselves
- relevance for legal discourse and legal operations
But an astonishingly similar common path: judicial enforcers of pitiless and genocidal dictatorships.
Born in bourgeoisie, trained as lawyers, political opponents of the old regime who joined the victorious Patron in order to eliminate the old elites and the present opposition and to establish a new legal order.
They began as enforcers but quickly became architects of tyranny by making themselves indispensable to their Patron thanks to
- deep knowledge of the judicial system,
- enormous work capacity,
- mastery of language,
- commitment to the powers-in-existence, and
- crushing personal ambitions.
They wrote extensively: pleadings, judgments, laws, regulations, treatises and courses justifying, orienting and rooting legally the dictatorships.
Dictatorships use eight basic tools in order to tame the Judiciary:
- exceptional laws;
- competition between the judiciary and political police;
- purging of the Courts;
- court packing;
- limitation of jurisdictions;
- creation of special jurisdictions;
- persuasion; and
- conditioning of legal minds.
Fouquier-Tinville, Vyschinsky and Freisler acted with the 8 tools,
- as enforcers in the special courts, and
- as organizers of mass murders conducted by the State
A phenomenon not limited in time or geographically:
Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, ISIS
But an astonishingly similar common path: judicial enforcers of pitiless and genocidal dictatorships.
Born in bourgeoisie, trained as lawyers, political opponents of the old regime who joined the victorious Patron in order to eliminate the old elites and the present opposition and to establish a new legal order.
They began as enforcers but quickly became architects of tyranny by making themselves indispensable to their Patron thanks to
- deep knowledge of the judicial system,
- enormous work capacity,
- mastery of language,
- commitment to the powers-in-existence, and
- crushing personal ambitions.
They wrote extensively: pleadings, judgments, laws, regulations, treatises and courses justifying, orienting and rooting legally the dictatorships.
Dictatorships use eight basic tools in order to tame the Judiciary:
exceptional laws;
- competition between the judiciary and political police;
- purging of the Courts;
- court packing;
- limitation of jurisdictions;
- creation of special jurisdictions;
- persuasion; and
- conditioning of legal minds.
Fouquier-Tinville, Vyschinsky and Freisler acted with the 8 tools,
- as enforcers in the special courts, and
- as organizers of mass murders conducted by the State
A phenomenon not limited in time or geographically: Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, ISIS
1. the cognitive, social and economic consequences of the traumatic stress experienced by Yazidi survivors, especially women, in consequence of the genocide inflicted on them by DAESH; and
2. the measures to be taken to support their rehabilitation and cicatrization.
Description du risque dans les processus d'immigration et de demande d'asile, notamment pour l'Évaluation du risque avant renvoi.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
The lists of metaphors and metonymies I found or compiled for the article.
ABSTRACT:
Metaphor and metonymy are not mere tropes, but instruments for reasoning in law and about law. Another illustration that Law is a cognitive tool created by homo sapiens.
La métaphore et la métonymie ne sont pas seulement des tropes, mais des instruments pour raisonner en droit et à propos du droit. Un autre exemple de ce que le droit est un instrument cognitif créé par homo sapiens.
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Part I – The nervous system and the encephalon
Part II – Fundamental elements of communication
Part III – Embodiement and communication
Part IV – Description and analysis of communication
Part V – The making of meaning
Part VI – From tactics to strategy: from conversation to examination
Partie I – Le système nerveux et l’encéphale
Partie II – Éléments fondamentaux de la communication
Partie III – Incarnation et communication
Partie IV – Description et analyse de la communication
Partie V – La construction du sens
Partie VI - De la tactique à la stratégie: de la conversation à l’interrogatoire
Objectives: to have lawyers understand, use and conceive instruments and strategies for communication with their clients or witnesses.
Buts: fournir aux avocats un cadre valide scientifiquement pour leurs situations de communication dans leurs bureaux avec leurs clients ou les témoins.
Objectifs: faire en sorte que l’avocat comprenne, utilise, et conçoive
des instruments et des stratégies de communication avec le client ou le témoin.
Objectives: to have lawyers understand, use and conceive instruments and strategies for communication with their clients or witnesses.
Buts: fournir aux avocats un cadre valide scientifiquement pour leurs situations de communication dans leurs bureaux avec leurs clients ou les témoins.
Objectifs: faire en sorte que l’avocat comprenne, utilise, et conçoive
des instruments et des stratégies de communication avec le client ou le témoin.
Objectifs: faire en sorte que l’avocat comprenne, utilise, et conçoive
des instruments et des stratégies de communication avec le client ou le témoin.
Purpose: to provide to lawyers a scientifically valid analytical framework for their situations of communication with their clients or witnesses in their law offices.
Objectives: to have lawyers understand, use and conceive instruments and strategies for communication with their clients or witnesses.
Objectifs: faire en sorte que l’avocat comprenne, utilise, et conçoive des instruments et des stratégies de communication avec le client ou le témoin.
Purpose: to provide to lawyers a scientifically valid analytical framework for their situations of communication with their clients or witnesses in their law offices
Objectives: to have lawyers understand, use and conceive instruments and strategies for communication with their client or witness
- common law, law of property, law of torts, law of contracts
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But an astonishingly similar common path: judicial enforcers of pitiless and genocidal dictatorships.
Born in bourgeoisie, trained as lawyers, political opponents of the old regime who joined the victorious Patron in order to eliminate the old elites and the present opposition and to establish a new legal order.
They began as enforcers but quickly became architects of tyranny by making themselves indispensable to their Patron thanks to
- deep knowledge of the judicial system,
- enormous work capacity,
- mastery of language,
- commitment to the powers-in-existence, and
- crushing personal ambitions.
They wrote extensively: pleadings, judgments, laws, regulations, treatises and courses justifying, orienting and rooting legally the dictatorships.
Dictatorships use eight basic tools in order to tame the Judiciary:
- exceptional laws;
- competition between the judiciary and political police;
- purging of the Courts;
- court packing;
- limitation of jurisdictions;
- creation of special jurisdictions;
- persuasion; and
- conditioning of legal minds.
Fouquier-Tinville, Vyschinsky and Freisler acted with the 8 tools,
as enforcers in the special courts, and as organizers of mass murders conducted by the State
A phenomenon not limited in time or geographically:
Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, ISIS