Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Digital Commons Network

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

International Law

Journal

Institution
Keyword
Publication Year
Publication

Articles 1 - 17 of 17

Full-Text Articles in Entire DC Network

Bio-Property Contracts In A New Ecosystem: Genetic Resources Access And Benefit Sharing, Mariko Kageyama Jan 2018

Bio-Property Contracts In A New Ecosystem: Genetic Resources Access And Benefit Sharing, Mariko Kageyama

Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts

The Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization to the Convention on Biological Diversity presents a relatively new international legal framework. Although the United States is not currently bound by this legal instrument, its impact may be felt in the life sciences innovation sector and beyond. Transnational implementation mechanisms for the Nagoya Protocol have a combination of property law and contract law as their theoretical underpinning. Stakeholders who are entering into an agreement with their foreign counterparts should honor the Access and Benefit-Sharing scheme as well as domestic …


The Legality Of Intervention For Protection Of National Abroad In Order To Solve Piracy And Hostage (A Study Of Law Concerning The Possible Use Of Armed Force To Release Hostages Detained By Abu Sayyaf Armed Group), Syofirman Syofyan Oct 2017

The Legality Of Intervention For Protection Of National Abroad In Order To Solve Piracy And Hostage (A Study Of Law Concerning The Possible Use Of Armed Force To Release Hostages Detained By Abu Sayyaf Armed Group), Syofirman Syofyan

Indonesian Journal of International Law

Until now hijacking or taking crew as hostage including the people who have Indonesian nationality has been repeatedly done by a group of suspected Abu Sayyaf rebel group. The use of non-violent efforts as negotiations have been conducted. There were failure and it resulted in the execution of the hostages. But some of them were successful to release the hostages allegedly after approving the fulfillment of the demands of the hostage-takers i.e. paying the ransom. However this did not stop the subsequent hostage-taking incident. This is clearly an injury for the country of origin of the crew or people who …


Putting The Pieces Together: A Proposal For A Contributory Infringement Provision In Patent Law, Xianzhi Quan Jun 2016

Putting The Pieces Together: A Proposal For A Contributory Infringement Provision In Patent Law, Xianzhi Quan

Chicago-Kent Journal of Intellectual Property

Among the top five countries who have filed the most patent applications under the Patent Cooperation Treaty (“PCT”) in 2015, China is the only country that has no provision regarding contributory patent infringement. As a result, in patent cases related to contributory infringement, different courts have adopted different criteria to determine whether contributory patent infringement is present. This has resulted in many problems in China, causing confusion and conflicts in understanding among patent holders and the public.

With the increase of patent infringement cases in China, legislation on the standard of contributory patent infringement is imminent. This Article puts forward …


The Evolution Of Greece's Security Legislation And Policy, Andreas Borgeas Mar 2016

The Evolution Of Greece's Security Legislation And Policy, Andreas Borgeas

Journal of International and Comparative Law

No abstract provided.


One Pillar: Legal Authority And A Social License To Operate In A Global Context, Hans Lindahl Jan 2016

One Pillar: Legal Authority And A Social License To Operate In A Global Context, Hans Lindahl

Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies

The claim that businesses have a social license to operate acquires concrete form in the second pillar of the U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs) in the fundamental distinction between "compliance with all applicable laws" and "respect for human rights." The aim of this paper is to critically examine the presuppositions that undergird this distinction and to explain how and why moving beyond state-centered thinking about law, in response to violations of human rights by globally operating businesses, requires acknowledging that there is one pillar that embraces states and businesses: the legal obligation to comply with international …


Public Policies For Education In Latin America And The Difficulties Imposed By International Obligations For Technological Protection Measures, Marcela Palacio Puerta Jan 2016

Public Policies For Education In Latin America And The Difficulties Imposed By International Obligations For Technological Protection Measures, Marcela Palacio Puerta

American University International Law Review

No abstract provided.


Chinese "Workers Without Benefits", Ron Brown Jan 2016

Chinese "Workers Without Benefits", Ron Brown

Richmond Journal of Global Law & Business

Millions of workers in China are not afforded the rights and benefits of its labor and employment laws and thus are not "workers with benefits." China's labor reforms and worker "safety net" have come so far in the past 30 years, producing "workers with benefits." Why are there still millions of workers in the urban sector who do not have the protections of these labor and employment law reforms, who are the "workers without benefits," falling outside the labor safety net?


Changing The Rules Of The (International) Game: How International Law Is Turning National Courts Into International Political Actors, Osnat Grady Schwartz Jan 2015

Changing The Rules Of The (International) Game: How International Law Is Turning National Courts Into International Political Actors, Osnat Grady Schwartz

Washington International Law Journal

Courts are known to be political actors. National courts play the political game in the national domain. International courts play it in the international sphere. This article studies the transformation of national courts into international political actors (IPAs), and the part international law plays in so making them. The article identifies, categorizes, and demonstrates the influence of national courts and judges on international relations (IR), separating the influence into two main categories: direct and indirect. Direct influence, is the effect of a national court taking a position on international issues in concrete situations with immediate IR implications. Indirect influence is …


Cultural Governance And Development In Vietnam, Lauren Saltiel Jan 2014

Cultural Governance And Development In Vietnam, Lauren Saltiel

University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law

No abstract provided.


Syracuse Journal Of International Law And Commerce - Volume 42, No. 1 (Complete) Jan 2014

Syracuse Journal Of International Law And Commerce - Volume 42, No. 1 (Complete)

Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce

No abstract provided.


Curtailing Subsidy Wars In Global Trade: Revisiting The Economics Of World Trade Organization Law On Subsidies, Sacchidananda Mukherjee, Debashis Chakraborty, Julien Chaisse Jan 2014

Curtailing Subsidy Wars In Global Trade: Revisiting The Economics Of World Trade Organization Law On Subsidies, Sacchidananda Mukherjee, Debashis Chakraborty, Julien Chaisse

Syracuse Journal of International Law and Commerce

The positive influence of subsidies on merchandise exports is well known from international trade theory literature. However, the empirical evidence on the relationship itself remains ambiguous. This article fills a gap in the existing pool of research by conducting a panel data empirical analysis over two decades for 140 countries to understand the relationship between their overall budgetary subsidies and aggregate merchandise export inclination. The detailed research findings of this paper underline the importance of going beyond the "Bali Package" agreed in December 2013 and concluding the Doha Round Negotiations of the World Trade Organization ("WTO"). The outline for the …


A Step In The Right Direction For Japan's Judicial Reform: Impact Of The Justice System Reform Council Recommendations On Criminal Justice And Citizen Participation In Criminal, Civil, And Administrative Litigation, Hiroshi Fukurai Jan 2013

A Step In The Right Direction For Japan's Judicial Reform: Impact Of The Justice System Reform Council Recommendations On Criminal Justice And Citizen Participation In Criminal, Civil, And Administrative Litigation, Hiroshi Fukurai

UC Law SF International Law Review

No abstract provided.


Chuaigh Ár Lá – Debt Of A Gaelsman: Ireland’S Sovereign Debt Crisis, National And International Responses, James Croke Jan 2012

Chuaigh Ár Lá – Debt Of A Gaelsman: Ireland’S Sovereign Debt Crisis, National And International Responses, James Croke

Northwestern Journal of International Law & Business

How did a small island nation on the periphery of Europe go from the pauper of the European Union, to a paragon of a market economy, and back to fiscal ruin within the space of twenty years? Ireland was the poorest nation in the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1988. In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s it undertook structural reforms to fundamentally reshape its economy, the result was a booming economy throughout the mid-to-late 1990’s and early 2000’s, primarily fueled by exports and foreign direct investment. Rather than continue on a sustained, but slower, growth path in the 2000’s, …


Reconstruing Wto Legitimacy Debates, Michael Fakhri Oct 2011

Reconstruing Wto Legitimacy Debates, Michael Fakhri

Notre Dame Journal of International & Comparative Law

There is an emerging consensus that the WTO is in grave need of institutional redesign. For the last fifteen years, questions of WTO institutional reform have been framed as a matter of improving the WTO’s legitimacy. This Article suggests that thinking about WTO redesign as a matter of improving its legitimacy limits our ability to fundamentally appreciate what the WTO’s function and purpose is and conceptualize what it should be. It would be more useful to know what is exactly at stake and what have been the social, political, and economic implications of the legitimacy debate thus far. The legitimacy …


Transparency And The Expansion Of The Wto Mandate, Padideh Ala'i Jan 2011

Transparency And The Expansion Of The Wto Mandate, Padideh Ala'i

American University International Law Review

No abstract provided.


Competition Policy And Consumer Protection Policy In Jordan, Hetham Hani Abu Karky Sep 2010

Competition Policy And Consumer Protection Policy In Jordan, Hetham Hani Abu Karky

Penn State International Law Review

No abstract provided.


Palestinian Refugees: Protection In Exile, Vivienne Chew Jan 2010

Palestinian Refugees: Protection In Exile, Vivienne Chew

Human Rights & Human Welfare

The Palestinian refugee problem is perhaps the most critical and complex of the outstanding issues in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Sixty-two years have now passed since the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, in which hundreds of thousands of Palestinians were displaced en masse and rendered stateless. Since then, successive generations of Palestinian refugees have endured discrimination, insecurity, repeated cycles of displacement, and infringement of their basic rights and freedoms.