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International Law

2006

Fordham International Law Journal

Articles 31 - 47 of 47

Full-Text Articles in Law

Gender Equality And Customary Marriage: Bargaining In The Shadow Of Post-Apartheid Legal Pluralism, Tracy E. Higgins, Jeanmarie Fenrich, Ziona Tanzer Jan 2006

Gender Equality And Customary Marriage: Bargaining In The Shadow Of Post-Apartheid Legal Pluralism, Tracy E. Higgins, Jeanmarie Fenrich, Ziona Tanzer

Fordham International Law Journal

This Report represents the culmination of a year-long project undertaken by the Crowley Program in International Human Rights at the Fordham Law School to study issues surrounding women and customary law marriages in South Africa in light of its international legal commitments. This Report presents the findings of this research effort. Following this introduction, Part I of this Report describes South Africa's international and domestic legal obligations regarding culture and gender equality, particularly with respect to marriage, divorce, and family formation. Part I then sketches two distinct approaches to the tension between customary law and gender equality, both of which …


The Abuse Of Girls In U.S. Juvenile Detention Facilities: Why The United States Should Ratify The Convention On The Rights Of The Child And Establish A National Ombudsman For Children's Rights, Christina Okereke Jan 2006

The Abuse Of Girls In U.S. Juvenile Detention Facilities: Why The United States Should Ratify The Convention On The Rights Of The Child And Establish A National Ombudsman For Children's Rights, Christina Okereke

Fordham International Law Journal

This Note argues that, to address the abuse of detained girls, the United States should ratify the CRC. This Note further argues that establishing a national independent office or ombudsman to monitor children's conditions of confinement in the United States is a superior proposal to creating a U.N.-appointed special representative on violence against children. This Note concludes that, upon ratifying the CRC, the United States should establish a national ombudsman for children's rights. Part I of this Note presents the problem of physical and sexual abuse of detained girls in the United States and reviews the applicable international human rights …


Addressing The Incentive For Expropriation Within Business Groups: The Case Of The Korean Chaebol, Christopher Hale Jan 2006

Addressing The Incentive For Expropriation Within Business Groups: The Case Of The Korean Chaebol, Christopher Hale

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article builds upon prior empirical findings on the prevalence of pyramids and focuses on the financing subsidies derived through the internal capital markets of pyramids--particularly through affiliations with financial institutions. Part I of this Article provides a brief overview of the relevant literature and the role that pyramids can play in separating ownership and voting rights. Part II describes the phenomenon by which the financing advantages derived by firms with financial affiliates, often non-bank financial institutions (“NBFIs”), results in a distortion of the market that contributes to pyramid expansion, thereby exacerbating the risk of minority shareholder expropriation. Part III …


Clinical Legal Education And The Reform Of The Higher Legal Education System In China, Mao Ling Jan 2006

Clinical Legal Education And The Reform Of The Higher Legal Education System In China, Mao Ling

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article presents an overview of the higher legal education system in China: its structure, purposes, teaching methods, and problems. The Article suggests ways to reform China's higher legal education system, including clinical legal education, one of the new practical teaching methods that has been used by many law schools in China with promising results.


Applicability Of The Geneva Conventions To "Armed Conflict" In The War On Terror, Miles P. Fischer Jan 2006

Applicability Of The Geneva Conventions To "Armed Conflict" In The War On Terror, Miles P. Fischer

Fordham International Law Journal

This Essay briefly reviews the application of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 (the “Conventions”) in the so-called war on terror since September 11, 2001 (“9/11”), highlighting a few current issues of particular interest; notably, the concept of “armed conflict,” the role of Common Article 3, the impact of the MC Act, screening by “competent tribunals,” and enforcement of the Conventions in courts martial and against Central Intelligence Agency (“CIA”) operatives.


The Proliferation Of The Law Of International Criminal Tribunals Within Terrorism And "Unlawful" Combatancy Trials After Hamdan V. Rumsfeld, Geert-Jan Alexander Knoops Jan 2006

The Proliferation Of The Law Of International Criminal Tribunals Within Terrorism And "Unlawful" Combatancy Trials After Hamdan V. Rumsfeld, Geert-Jan Alexander Knoops

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article examines the arguments that led the Supreme Court to its landmark judgment, in particular: (i) the jurisdiction of federal courts to ascertain procedural challenges to the lawfulness of military commission proceedings; (ii) the relation to the Geneva Convention; (iii) the aspect of conspiracy as a (non-)legal basis for indictments issued before military commissions, especially in the argument raised by the defense in the Hamdan case; and (iv) the case law of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (“ICTY”) with respect to the concept of conspiracy and joint criminal enterprise (“JCE”). The case law of the ICTY, …


Unresolved Questions In The Bill Of Rights Of The New Iraqi Constitution: How Will The Clash Between "Human Rights" And "Islamic Law" Be Reconciled In Future Legislative Enactments And Judicial Interpretations?, Mohamed Y. Mattar Jan 2006

Unresolved Questions In The Bill Of Rights Of The New Iraqi Constitution: How Will The Clash Between "Human Rights" And "Islamic Law" Be Reconciled In Future Legislative Enactments And Judicial Interpretations?, Mohamed Y. Mattar

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article endeavors to answer the question, are the provisions on “human rights” and “Islamic Law” in the new Iraqi constitution compatible? The new Iraqi Constitution recognizes the concept of “human rights” in accordance with Iraq's international obligations, establishes an independent “Supreme Commission for Human Rights,” limits the work of governmental intelligence agencies in accordance with human rights, and prohibits tribal customs that contradict human rights. At the same time, the Constitution makes some references to Islamic Shari'ah: it establishes Islam as the official religion of the State, recognizes Islam as a source of legislation, recognizes Iraq as a part …


The Duality Of State Cooperation Within International And National Criminal Cases, Geert-Jan Alexander Knoops, Robert R. Amsterdam Jan 2006

The Duality Of State Cooperation Within International And National Criminal Cases, Geert-Jan Alexander Knoops, Robert R. Amsterdam

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article seeks to elaborate on various responses to challenges to the rule of law. The authors consider certain of the greatest of these challenges to center around illegitimate control of State organs by groups capable of infringing presumptive rights granted under treaty to States that in a systematic and continuous way resort to abuse of process. This Article, dealing with the equality of arms, is therefore only the first of a series exploring both this problem and the manner in which it may be addressed. This Article assesses whether and to what extent State cooperation, both before international tribunals …


Roadblocks To Effective Representation Of Uncharged Indefinitely Imprisoned Clients At Guantanamo Bay Military Base, Martha Rayner Jan 2006

Roadblocks To Effective Representation Of Uncharged Indefinitely Imprisoned Clients At Guantanamo Bay Military Base, Martha Rayner

Fordham International Law Journal

In Part I, this Note will discuss the current epidemic of human trafficking, the various ways the United Nations and the United States have attempted to combat trafficking, and highlight the importance of U.S. prosecutorial duties of witness protection that are especially implicated in human trafficking cases. Part II will present criticisms of efforts by the United Nations and the United States to protect victims of trafficking and their family members. This part will also focus on current U.S. protections afforded to families of human trafficking survivors and programs such as the Witness Security Program, from which U.S. lawmakers may …


Efficiency Consideration And Merger Enforcement: Comparison Of U.S. And Eu Approaches, Robert Pitofsky Jan 2006

Efficiency Consideration And Merger Enforcement: Comparison Of U.S. And Eu Approaches, Robert Pitofsky

Fordham International Law Journal

Discussion in this Essay is designed to explore recently introduced efficiency considerations and to compare developing law in the United States and the European Union. The following sections discuss why incorporation of efficiency factors has been controversial, explore efficiency analysis in connection with mergers under U.S. law, explore comparable developments in EU law, and, finally, offer a comparison of developments in the two jurisdictions.


Global Collaboration In Law Schools: Lessons To Learn, Elizabeth B. Cooper Jan 2006

Global Collaboration In Law Schools: Lessons To Learn, Elizabeth B. Cooper

Fordham International Law Journal

This Introduction to the Symposium, Global Alliance for Justice Education (“GAJE”) North American Regional Conference, discusses four articles in the Fordham International Law Journal that advance a growing goal of the GAJE: developing scholarship to facilitate justice education and increasing awareness of the global justice movement. Each of the following four articles identifies ways in which collaborating law professors in significantly different contexts--China, South Africa, Nicaragua, and the United States--can learn from each other to develop vital programs of legal education and to strive for social justice.


Jack Bauer And The Rule Of Law: The Case Of Extraordinary Rendition, James R. Silkenat, Peter M. Norman Jan 2006

Jack Bauer And The Rule Of Law: The Case Of Extraordinary Rendition, James R. Silkenat, Peter M. Norman

Fordham International Law Journal

This Essay examines the Bush Administration's use of a tactic in the “War on Terror” called “extraordinary rendition.” The term extraordinary rendition refers to the process by which alleged terrorists are captured by the U.S. Government, transferred to another country, interrogated, and possibly tortured--all without judicial involvement--so the U.S. Government may attempt to uncover possible terrorist activity. Extraordinary rendition thus differs from ordinary forms of rendition, since the latter refers broadly to any circumstance where a government takes or transfers custody of a person by means of procedures outside those of extradition treaties.


Don't Forget The Family: A Proposal For Expanding Immediate Protection To Families Of Human Trafficking Survivors, Katrina Lynne Baker Jan 2006

Don't Forget The Family: A Proposal For Expanding Immediate Protection To Families Of Human Trafficking Survivors, Katrina Lynne Baker

Fordham International Law Journal

In Part I, this Note will discuss the current epidemic of human trafficking, the various ways the United Nations and the United States have attempted to combat trafficking, and highlight the importance of U.S. prosecutorial duties of witness protection that are especially implicated in human trafficking cases. Part II will present criticisms of efforts by the United Nations and the United States to protect victims of trafficking and their family members. This part will also focus on current U.S. protections afforded to families of human trafficking survivors and programs such as the Witness Security Program, from which U.S. lawmakers may …


A New Tort Code Emerges In China: An Introduction To The Discussion With A Translation Of Chapter 8- Tort Liability, Of The Official Discussion Draft Of The Proposed Revised Civil Code Of The People's Republic Of China, George W. Conk Jan 2006

A New Tort Code Emerges In China: An Introduction To The Discussion With A Translation Of Chapter 8- Tort Liability, Of The Official Discussion Draft Of The Proposed Revised Civil Code Of The People's Republic Of China, George W. Conk

Fordham International Law Journal

In 1986, the Sixth National People's Congress enacted the General Principles of Civil Law of the People Republic of China ("1986Code). The 1986 Code is now undergoing comprehensive revision. The Standing Committee of the National Peoples Congress (the national legislature) issued a comprehensive draft revised civil code for discussion on December 17, 2002 "Standing Committee Discussion Draft". Discussion in China of the 2002 Standing Committee Discussion Draft has recently centered on the chapter on property rights. Passed on March 16, 2007, after seven drafts, the property rights chapter has been the source, one can readily understand, of much more controversy …


Following The Path Of Oil: The Law Of The Sea Or Realpolitik - What Good Does Law Do In The South China Sea Territorial Conflicts?, Wendy N. Duong Jan 2006

Following The Path Of Oil: The Law Of The Sea Or Realpolitik - What Good Does Law Do In The South China Sea Territorial Conflicts?, Wendy N. Duong

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article describes the relevant features of United Nationas Convention on the Law of the Sea ("UNCLOS"), demonstrates how the Convention is ill-equipped to handle the complexity of the South China Sea disputes, and explores the role of the private sector behind State actors in any negotiated resolution of these disputes. This Article also surveys the development of these disputes from the last decade to the present day, using as a case study the tension between China and Vietnam in the 1990s when UNCLOS went into force. Although the case study occurred in the past decade, the pattern of behaviors …


A Tribute To Judge Bo Vesterdorf, Roger J. Goebel Jan 2006

A Tribute To Judge Bo Vesterdorf, Roger J. Goebel

Fordham International Law Journal

Judge Bo Vesterdorf retires this fall after serving as Judge on the Court of First Instance (“CFI”) since its inauguration on September 25, 1989, acting as its President for three successive terms since 1998. It is accordingly highly appropriate that the editors of the Fordham International Law Journal (“ILJ”) should dedicate this annual issue devoted to European Union (“EU”) law to Judge Vesterdorf as an eminent jurist who has significantly contributed to the development of the CFI's jurisprudence, and also provided able pragmatic leadership as its presiding judge. The ILJ can be considered to act on behalf of the entire …


Targeted Sanctions, Human Rights, And The Court Of First Instance Of The European Community, Elizabeth F. Defeis Jan 2006

Targeted Sanctions, Human Rights, And The Court Of First Instance Of The European Community, Elizabeth F. Defeis

Fordham International Law Journal

In response to the increasing rise of terrorist activities throughout the European Union (“EU”) and the attacks of September 11, the Council of the European Union (“Council”) acted through its powers under the Common Foreign and Security Policy. In addition to other measures, the Council enacted regulations that froze the assets of alleged terrorist individuals and entities. In some cases, the regulations froze assets of alleged terrorists that had been placed on a list published by the U.N. Sanctions Committee, while in another, the assets of individuals were frozen after the European Council itself placed individuals on a list that …