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The Spectre Of Globalization, Tim Dunne
The Spectre Of Globalization, Tim Dunne
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.
Neocolonialism, Anticommons Property, And Biopiracy In The (Not-So-Brave) New World Order Of International Intellectual Property Protection, Keith Aoki
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
No abstract provided.
Libertad V. Liberalism: An Analysis Of The Helms-Burton Act From Within Liberal International Relations Theory, David Fidler
Libertad V. Liberalism: An Analysis Of The Helms-Burton Act From Within Liberal International Relations Theory, David Fidler
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
Professor Fidler's article examines the Cuban Liberty and Democratic
Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of
1996,
Act, from within liberal international relations theory. He takes as his starting
point the controversy that the Helms-Burton Act has produced among liberal,
democratic states. Professor Fidler outlines the major tenets of the liberal
tradition in international relations thinking: promoting economic
interdependence, internationall aw, internationali nstitutions,a nd democracy.
He then looks at the arguments made by opponents of the Helms-Burton Act
from within each of these liberal tenets, showing how opponents believe the
Helms-Burton Act undermines economic interdependence, violates
international law, by-passes international institutions, and does …
Stop Stomping On The Rest Of Us: Retrieving Publicness From The Privatization Of The Globe, Zillah Eisenstein
Stop Stomping On The Rest Of Us: Retrieving Publicness From The Privatization Of The Globe, Zillah Eisenstein
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
Professor Eisenstein's article discusses the effects of globalization on the
relationship between privatization and public responsibility and how this
dynamic impacts the future of women across the globe. She argues that the
global growth of privatization in the North and West has disseminated around
the world to the detriment of women. Privatization, she contends, has been
accepted as the agenda of politicians for the late twentieth century, and public
responsibility has been lost as a result.
According to Professor Eisenstein, globalization has been essentially an
economic process in which a global economy surfaces without differences or
borders. The global economy, …