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The Constitutionality Of Wipo’S Broadcasting Treaty: The Originality And Limited Times Requirements Of The Copyright Clause, Adam R. Tarosky
The Constitutionality Of Wipo’S Broadcasting Treaty: The Originality And Limited Times Requirements Of The Copyright Clause, Adam R. Tarosky
Duke Law & Technology Review
Because the proposed WIPO Broadcasting Treaty extends perpetual copyright-like protections to unoriginal information, its implementation would violate at least two fundamental limitations on Congress’s Copyright Clause power: the originality and "limited times" requirements. But Congress has a trump card--the Commerce Clause. This iBrief argues that to give proper effect to the limitations of the Copyright Clause, Congress should not be allowed to implement copyright-like legislation under the less restrictive Commerce Clause.
Protecting Intellectual Property In The Developing World: Next Stop—Thailand, Cortney M. Arnold
Protecting Intellectual Property In The Developing World: Next Stop—Thailand, Cortney M. Arnold
Duke Law & Technology Review
This iBrief examines the U.S. strategy for strengthening the protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) in Southeast Asia through the use of free trade agreements (FTAs). After briefly examining the U.S. methodology for strengthening IPRs outside the U.S., this iBrief predicts that the intellectual property provisions in the final text of the U.S.-Thailand FTA, which is currently being negotiated, will be very similar to the provisions in previous FTAs that the United States has negotiated with other developing countries.
Mining The Common Heritage Of Our Dna: Lessons Learned From Grotius And Pardo, Jasper A. Bovenberg
Mining The Common Heritage Of Our Dna: Lessons Learned From Grotius And Pardo, Jasper A. Bovenberg
Duke Law & Technology Review
The Human Genome Project generated oceans of DNA sequence data and spurred a multinational race to grab the bounties of these oceans. In response to these DNA property grabs, UNESCO, drawing upon international law precedents addressing analogous grabs in the past, declared the Human Genome the heritage of humanity. The UNESCO Declaration provided, first, that the heritage shall not, in its natural state, give rise to financial gains and, second, that countries establish an international framework to make the benefits from genome research available to all. This iBrief will first examine Grotius’s Mare Liberum to determine whether international law precedent …
The Perennial Conflict Between International Criminal Justice And Realpolitik, M. Cherif Bassiouni
The Perennial Conflict Between International Criminal Justice And Realpolitik, M. Cherif Bassiouni
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Employing Health Rights For Global Justice: The Promise Of Public Health In Response To The Insalubrious Ramifications Of Globalization , Benjamin Mason Meier
Employing Health Rights For Global Justice: The Promise Of Public Health In Response To The Insalubrious Ramifications Of Globalization , Benjamin Mason Meier
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
On The Uneasy Relation Between International Law And Democracy, Carol C. Gould
On The Uneasy Relation Between International Law And Democracy, Carol C. Gould
ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law
The question we are asked to address is as follows: "Is international law a threat to democracy?" As a political philosopher, my inclination is to suggest that the answer requires clarifying at the outset the sense in which we are using each of the main terms here.
Isla Journal Of International & Comparative Law, Isla Journal Of International & Comparative Law
Isla Journal Of International & Comparative Law, Isla Journal Of International & Comparative Law
ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law
I joined Christie's a little over a year ago as Director of Restitution, coordinating Christie's restitution issues globally.
Imagine A World Without Hunger: The Hurdles Of Global Justice, Muna Ndulo
Imagine A World Without Hunger: The Hurdles Of Global Justice, Muna Ndulo
Cornell International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
A Cross-Country Assessment Of Government Intervention And Entrepreneurial Activity, Maria Minniti
A Cross-Country Assessment Of Government Intervention And Entrepreneurial Activity, Maria Minniti
New England Journal of Entrepreneurship
Recent studies have shown that the contribution of small firms to employment and GDP is increasing. A large amount of work has also established the significance of social and economic variables for entrepreneurial decisions. Very little is known, however, about how government policies and programs influence entrepreneurial activity, and whether these effects are consistent across countries. Using original data from a representative sample of 10,000 individuals and from more than 300 open-ended interviews in 10 countries, this article provides some suggestive evidence that government intervention aimed at enhancing the underlying environment of entrepreneurial decisions may be more effective than intervention …
Cross-Border It-Support For The Management Of International Subsidiary Operations: The Diffusion Of Innovations-Based Conceptual Model, Arto Ojala, Nazmun Nahar
Cross-Border It-Support For The Management Of International Subsidiary Operations: The Diffusion Of Innovations-Based Conceptual Model, Arto Ojala, Nazmun Nahar
Journal of International Technology and Information Management
Rapid and effective internationalization has increasingly become important for high-tech companies. Establishing a foreign subsidiary can facilitate effective internationalization for a high-tech company. This study investigates how IT can provide cross-border support to manage international subsidiary operations and makes important theoretical contributions. The research results exhibit how companies can use cross-border IT-support to effectively share and utilize information from the target country environment for international subsidiary operations. This paper also introduces the diffusion of innovations-based conceptual model which deals with various factors that should be taken into account while operating a foreign subsidiary through IT support. The findings are useful …
Vanishing Trials: An English Perspective, Robert Dingwall, Emilie Cloatre
Vanishing Trials: An English Perspective, Robert Dingwall, Emilie Cloatre
Journal of Dispute Resolution
This paper reviews the recent history of civil litigation in England and Wales. While previous work by Professor Kritzer has shown an absolute decline in trials over the last fifty years, with some fluctuation around this trend, this comment suggests that this may now have bottomed out. Given the evidence of a simultaneous, and continuing, decline in the number of claims filed, it may even be the case that trials are, at least temporarily, playing a larger part in the civil justice system than they have for many years. In contrast to the experience in the U.S., these changes seem …
Not Quite A World Without Trials: Why International Dispute Resolution Is Increasingly Judicialized, Andrea Kupfer Schneider
Not Quite A World Without Trials: Why International Dispute Resolution Is Increasingly Judicialized, Andrea Kupfer Schneider
Journal of Dispute Resolution
The focus of this brief essay is to first outline some of the factors leading to increasing judicialization on the international level where public disputes (disputes between countries) are increasingly resolved by a neutral third party. In some cases, this increased judicialization includes arbitration (which we might put under the category of ADR in the U.S.). However, the use of arbitration at the international level is not ADR as we would define it in the U.S., since the important element at the international level is that the decision-making power is handed over to a third party-whether we call that a …
Parties To International Commercial Arbitration Agreements Beware: Bankruptcy Trumps Supreme Court Precedent Favoring Arbitration Of International Disputes, Lindsay Biesterfeld
Parties To International Commercial Arbitration Agreements Beware: Bankruptcy Trumps Supreme Court Precedent Favoring Arbitration Of International Disputes, Lindsay Biesterfeld
Journal of Dispute Resolution
Phillips v. Congelton (In re White Mountain Mining Co.), presents a heightened version of the conflict between the general policy favoring enforcement of arbitration agreements and the policy favoring resolution of bankruptcy-related claims in the bankruptcy court proceedings as the case involves a dispute over the enforcement of an international agreement to arbitrate a claim that is a "core" bankruptcy proceeding. In Phillips, the Fourth Circuit analyzed the underlying purposes of both the bankruptcy code and the federal arbitration statutes, and resolved the conflicting purposes of the two by giving greater deference to the policy favoring resolution of bankruptcy-related claims …
Empresa Cubana Del Tabaco V. Culbro Corp., Victoria Loughery
Empresa Cubana Del Tabaco V. Culbro Corp., Victoria Loughery
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Transnational Communication And Defamatory Speech: A Case For Establishing Norms For The Twenty-First Century, David Goldberg
Transnational Communication And Defamatory Speech: A Case For Establishing Norms For The Twenty-First Century, David Goldberg
NYLS Law Review
No abstract provided.
Vanishing Or Increasing Trials In The Netherlands, Carolien Klein Haarhuis, Bert Niemeijer
Vanishing Or Increasing Trials In The Netherlands, Carolien Klein Haarhuis, Bert Niemeijer
Journal of Dispute Resolution
In this article, we will address the question of whether something like vanishing trials exists in the Netherlands. This could be the case, as some of the causes of the decline in the number of trials advanced by Galanter are also observed in the Netherlands. ADR is gaining popularity, the costs of court procedures are on the rise, and there clearly exists a development toward "managerial justice."
Differing Cultural Perceptions Regarding The Appropriate Use Of Workplace Computer Technologies, Heidi Perreault, Nancy Keith
Differing Cultural Perceptions Regarding The Appropriate Use Of Workplace Computer Technologies, Heidi Perreault, Nancy Keith
Journal of International Technology and Information Management
This study examined differences in perceptions of U.S. and international college students regarding appropriate use of computers. Ten common inappropriate computer-use behaviors were presented to students. Only two of the ten behaviors were identified by the students as being unacceptable. When compared by geographic region, the U.S. students rated four of the actions as being less acceptable than did the international students. Work experience had minimal influence on the students’ perceptions. The results indicate that regardless of nationality or previous work experience, students lack understanding of the appropriate use of workplace computer technologies. The results reinforce the need for corporations …
Major League Internationals With Minor-League Titles: Let Them In. Let Them Play., Casey Shilts, Kate Jett, Brett Lashbrook
Major League Internationals With Minor-League Titles: Let Them In. Let Them Play., Casey Shilts, Kate Jett, Brett Lashbrook
Marquette Sports Law Review
No abstract provided.