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Full-Text Articles in Law

Discourse Of Disobedience: Law, Political Philosophy, And Trials Of Conscientious Objectors, Hadar Aviram Jan 2008

Discourse Of Disobedience: Law, Political Philosophy, And Trials Of Conscientious Objectors, Hadar Aviram

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Has The Erie Doctrine Been Repealed By Congress?, Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr. Jan 2008

Has The Erie Doctrine Been Repealed By Congress?, Geoffrey C. Hazard Jr.

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


In Translation For The Latino Market Today: Acknowledging The Rights Of Consumers In A Multilingual Housing Market, Jo Carrillo Jan 2008

In Translation For The Latino Market Today: Acknowledging The Rights Of Consumers In A Multilingual Housing Market, Jo Carrillo

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Crafting True Immigration Reform, Richard A. Boswell Jan 2008

Crafting True Immigration Reform, Richard A. Boswell

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Franklin D. Roosevelt, Commander In Chief, Elizabeth L. Hillman Jan 2008

Franklin D. Roosevelt, Commander In Chief, Elizabeth L. Hillman

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Conceptualizing Complicity In Alien Tort Cases, Chimène Keitner Jan 2008

Conceptualizing Complicity In Alien Tort Cases, Chimène Keitner

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Predicting Probability: Regulating The Future Of Preimplantation Genetic Screening, Jaime S. King Jan 2008

Predicting Probability: Regulating The Future Of Preimplantation Genetic Screening, Jaime S. King

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Signature Identification In The Light Of Science And Experience, Roger C. Park Jan 2008

Signature Identification In The Light Of Science And Experience, Roger C. Park

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Equal Liberty: Assisted Reproductive Technology And Reproductive Equality, Radhika Rao Jan 2008

Equal Liberty: Assisted Reproductive Technology And Reproductive Equality, Radhika Rao

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Restructuring Of Legal Education Along Functional Lines, William K.S. Wang Jan 2008

The Restructuring Of Legal Education Along Functional Lines, William K.S. Wang

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


The Evolution Of "Fred": Family Responsibilities Discrimination And Developments In The Law Of Stereotyping And Implicit Bias, Joan C. Williams, Stephanie Bornstein Jan 2008

The Evolution Of "Fred": Family Responsibilities Discrimination And Developments In The Law Of Stereotyping And Implicit Bias, Joan C. Williams, Stephanie Bornstein

Faculty Scholarship

No abstract provided.


Modes Of Procedural Reform, Richard L. Marcus Jan 2008

Modes Of Procedural Reform, Richard L. Marcus

UC Law SF International Law Review

Procedural reform seems to be a constant concern in most countries, but there are different modes of accomplishing it. One is to empower judges to develop their own rules of procedure. Another is to have a legislative body do so. A third is to borrow procedural regimes from another nation. And a final mode would be to leave procedural reform to a band of "experts" who can devise the preferred solutions to procedural problems. This paper provides an initial examination into whether the mode of procedural reform used influences the nature or aggressiveness of the reforms themselves. Drawing mainly from …


Methods Of International Human Rights Adjudication: Towards A More Structured Decision-Making Process For The European Court Of Human Rights, Stefan Sottiaux, Gerhard Van Der Schyff Jan 2008

Methods Of International Human Rights Adjudication: Towards A More Structured Decision-Making Process For The European Court Of Human Rights, Stefan Sottiaux, Gerhard Van Der Schyff

UC Law SF International Law Review

An international tribunal such as the European Court of Human Rights is often lauded for its protection of human rights. Yet, there is room for improvement. The Court's adjudication style would benefit from more structured balancing of competing interests. Not only would greater structure serve to enhance the Court's efficiency and promote legal certainty, but it would also help to clarify the Court's subsidiary role in relation to national authorities when it comes to the protection of human rights. In bringing more structure to the Court's decision-making process, inspiration can be drawn from the debate regarding the balancing/categorization continuum to …


New Trends In Procedural Law: New Technologies And The Civil Litigation Process, Janet Walker, Garry D. Watson Jan 2008

New Trends In Procedural Law: New Technologies And The Civil Litigation Process, Janet Walker, Garry D. Watson

UC Law SF International Law Review

This report for the International Association of Procedural Law examines the impact of new technologies on the litigation process in six countries: The United States, Australia, Israel, Singapore, England and Wales, and Canada. Drawing on national reports from each of these countries, it considers: how new technologies are re-shaping the ways that we record and store information in the litigation process; the ways that the participants in the process communicate with one another; and the ways in which the case record or file is developed. It also considers whether new technologies are making the litigation process more efficient, more accessible …


In The Spirit Of Ubuntur. Enforcing The Rights Of Orphans And Vulnerable Children Affected By Hiv/Aids In South Africa, John D. Bessler Jan 2008

In The Spirit Of Ubuntur. Enforcing The Rights Of Orphans And Vulnerable Children Affected By Hiv/Aids In South Africa, John D. Bessler

UC Law SF International Law Review

The author discusses the traditional African concept of ubuntu, which is frequently cited in South African jurisprudence, and analyzes South Africa's violation of the human rights of orphans and vulnerable children affected by HIV/AIDS. South Africa's Constitution explicitly protects children's rights and various socio-economic rights of concern to children. The Constitutional Court of South Africa has held such rights to be justiciable, yet the rights of South African children have continually been violated. The author discusses how the existence of these rights may assist orphans and vulnerable children as well as those advocating on their behalf, and identifies legal strategies …


Implementing The Prohibition Of Torture On Three Levels: The United Nations, The Council Of Europe, And Germany, Joachim Herrmann Jan 2008

Implementing The Prohibition Of Torture On Three Levels: The United Nations, The Council Of Europe, And Germany, Joachim Herrmann

UC Law SF International Law Review

In the fight against terrorism the United States government has tried to draw a line between proper and improper methods of interrogation and treatment of detainees. The question whether and to what extent torture and other kinds of ill-treatment might be justified is widely discussed in the United States today. To date, no satisfying answer has been found. There is doubt that a generally accepted answer could ever be found. In view of this dilemma it might be helpful to look beyond the borders of the United States to see what answers have been given elsewhere. This paper will explain …


The Internationalization Of The American Journal Of International Law: Reality Or Chimera (A Survey), Christos Ravanides Jan 2008

The Internationalization Of The American Journal Of International Law: Reality Or Chimera (A Survey), Christos Ravanides

UC Law SF International Law Review

In 2006 the American Society of International Law celebrated its centennial anniversary. In 2007 it is the turn of the Society's flagship publication, the American Journal of International Law, to celebrate its centennial volume. This first-of-its-kind detailed survey dissects the Journal's "international" attribute: how truly "international" and how "American" has this prestigious publication proved in the course of a century? How accommodating a host has it been to international lawyers with no U.S. affiliation or with 'deviating' views on international law? The research has been multi-fold; we examine the content, the structure and the thematology of the Journal, measuring foreign …


Less Privacy Please, We're British: Investigating Crime With Dna In The U.K. And The U.S., Duncan Carling Jan 2008

Less Privacy Please, We're British: Investigating Crime With Dna In The U.K. And The U.S., Duncan Carling

UC Law SF International Law Review

The United States and Great Britain are the world leaders in the use of DNA databases for criminal investigations, but the laws governing their use are evolving differently in each country. This note compares the American and British DNA database programs, and looks at two notable differences in practice: the collection of DNA samples from people who have been arrested but not convicted, and the technique of looking for an offender's relatives in the database. The note offers an explanation as to why the legislation is evolving differently, and argues that disparate cultural views on privacy are as much part …


The Transatlantic Divergence In Legal Thought: American Law And Economics Vs. German Doctrinalism, Kristoffel Grechenig, Martin Gelter Jan 2008

The Transatlantic Divergence In Legal Thought: American Law And Economics Vs. German Doctrinalism, Kristoffel Grechenig, Martin Gelter

UC Law SF International Law Review

Economic analysis plays a major role in the American legal discourse, while its position in the German-speaking legal debate remains comparatively limited. In Germany and Austria, a widespread aversion against law and economics can be observed among legal scholars. This article advances an explanation for this divergence on the basis of two main factors. First, American legal realism enjoyed great success, whereas the German freelaw movement failed to leave a lasting impression. While legal realism transformed American legal thought and opened up the discourse to policy arguments, the predominant German legal theory emphasizes the internal coherence of the legal system, …


Shared Dilemmas: Justice For Rape Victims Under International Law And Protection For Rape Victims Seeking Asylum, Lindsay Peterson Jan 2008

Shared Dilemmas: Justice For Rape Victims Under International Law And Protection For Rape Victims Seeking Asylum, Lindsay Peterson

UC Law SF International Law Review

Rape is prohibited in every major domestic legal system and has long been a violation of customary international law, yet it is rarely prosecuted in either context. It was not until the 1990s, when women became actively involved in the international community through lobbying and occupying leadership positions, that the idea of rape as a crime against honor was reevaluated and modified to recognize rape as a violent crime. However, rape victims are still denied justice in many cases under international law and are denied protection from their attackers under U.S. domestic asylum law. This paper will examine the successes …


Worldwide Corporate Convergence Within A Pluralistic Business Legal Order: Company Law And The Independent Director System In Contemporary China, Chi-Wei Huang Jan 2008

Worldwide Corporate Convergence Within A Pluralistic Business Legal Order: Company Law And The Independent Director System In Contemporary China, Chi-Wei Huang

UC Law SF International Law Review

This article will introduce both the dominant corporate model and corporate ownership structure as well as the model for the most efficient corporate governance system under the New Pluralistic Business Legal Order, as promoted by the proponents of the theory of global convergence of corporate governance. The author discusses how this phenomenon impacts China's corporate governance system during its ongoing economic and legal reforms. The author identifies the path dependencies and other problems the Chinese corporate governance system has been encountering, and suggests measures to address these problems. The article concludes by exploring why the path dependencies are harder to …


Sixty Years In The Making: The Definition Of Aggression For The International Criminal Court, Keith A. Petty Jan 2008

Sixty Years In The Making: The Definition Of Aggression For The International Criminal Court, Keith A. Petty

UC Law SF International Law Review

The post-war trials of Axis, war criminals marked the last time that the crime of aggression was prosecuted. Today, the Special Working Group on the Crime of Aggression (SWG) is nearing agreement on a definition that will likely be adopted by the Assembly of States Parties to the International Criminal Court (ICC) - a prerequisite to the Court's exercise of jurisdiction over this, particular offense. In spite of decades of work, several key issues remain to be resolved before the definition is finalized. These include: The level of involvement of the Security Council in determining when a State commits aggressive …


Constitutional Changes, Transitional Justice, And Legitimacy: The Life And Death Of Argentina's "Amnesty" Laws, Jose Sebastian Elias Jan 2008

Constitutional Changes, Transitional Justice, And Legitimacy: The Life And Death Of Argentina's "Amnesty" Laws, Jose Sebastian Elias

UC Law SF International Law Review

The article analyzes in-depth the legal and political process through which Argentina came, first, to grant amnesty to former military officers who took part in the repression during the last dictatorship (1976-1983) and then, to nullify those "amnesties" and indict the officers again eighteen years later. The thematic core is the legitimacy (or lack of it) of constitutional changes carried out by these unconventional means, which were the unavoidable consequence of the difficult process of transitional justice in Argentina.

Section I gives an overview of the most salient legal and political facts of the last twenty-five years and poses the …


International Law Versus The Preemptive Use Of Force: Racing To Confront The Specter Of A Nuclear Iran, Roxana Vatanparast Jan 2008

International Law Versus The Preemptive Use Of Force: Racing To Confront The Specter Of A Nuclear Iran, Roxana Vatanparast

UC Law SF International Law Review

The United States claims that Iran's uranium enrichment program is for the purpose of creating nuclear weapons, and is thus in violation of the Treaty on the Non-proliferation of Nuclear Weapons. Although the question of whether Iran has, or will soon have, a nuclear weapon is still speculative, the U.S. is adamant that even if Iran does not currently have a nuclear weapon, it soon will, and all measures must be taken to prevent that from happening. This note analyzes whether the preemptive use of force in this context would meet traditional customary international law requirements as originally established in …


Recognition And Enforcement Of U.S. Punitive Damages Awards In Continental Europe: The Italian Supreme Court's Veto, Francesco Quarta Jan 2008

Recognition And Enforcement Of U.S. Punitive Damages Awards In Continental Europe: The Italian Supreme Court's Veto, Francesco Quarta

UC Law SF International Law Review

Once again, a European court denied the enforcement of a U.S. punitive damages award. Different actors, same outcome: punitive damages are deemed contrary to public policy in Europe, where the different national systems of civil liability do not seek punishment, but strict compensation. This article studies the developments of punitive damages within the United States, highlighting the anomalies that such doctrine carries with regard to both private and criminal law. Among the explicit goals of this study is the disclosure of the main (constitutional) hurdles which the Italian legal system poses to the judicial recognition of U.S. punitive damages awards. …


Fifteen Minutes Of Shame: The Growing Notoriety Of Grand Corruption, Mary Evans Webster Jan 2008

Fifteen Minutes Of Shame: The Growing Notoriety Of Grand Corruption, Mary Evans Webster

UC Law SF International Law Review

Today the international community is focused, like never before, on efforts to reduce corruption as an essential component of poverty eradication. Grand corruption is the payment of bribes in connection with major interactions such as large infrastructure projects or arms sales and the abuse of political power to extract and accumulate for private gain. In the last five years, the United Nations, the World Bank and the United States Agency for International Development have all launched aggressive new agendas to address the crime of grand corruption. But, these agendas are not without their shortcomings and ardent critics. This article explores …


Australian Shareholders Rejoice: Current Developments In Australian Corporate Litigation, Paul Von Nessen Jan 2008

Australian Shareholders Rejoice: Current Developments In Australian Corporate Litigation, Paul Von Nessen

UC Law SF International Law Review

This article considers recent Australian case law which will enhance the ability of Australian shareholders to pursue remedies against their companies for improper disclosure in relation to the acquisition of securities. The article further observes that, in contrast to the United States legal environment, actions which may be used to pursue such securities claims have been encouraged in Australia in recent years by the adoption of effective class action procedures and the relaxation of litigation funding rules.


What Is A Rate - The Distinction Between Descriptions And Charges, And This Distinction's Impact On Federal Preemption For Wireless Truth In Billing, R. Matthew Warner Jan 2008

What Is A Rate - The Distinction Between Descriptions And Charges, And This Distinction's Impact On Federal Preemption For Wireless Truth In Billing, R. Matthew Warner

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

In 1993 Congress passed the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, which placed a limitation on state power to regulate rates of wireless carriers. This legislation explicitly reserved to the states the power to adjust the "terms and conditions" of a wireless provider's service. The FCC, however, interpreted the act as preempting states from requiring or prohibiting explicit line items. While many of the theoretical grounds for the FCC's 2005 Truthin- Billing Declaratory Ruling are correct, the empirical examples cited seem to conflict with its theoretical rulings, causing some of the Ruling to violate 5 U.S.C. § 706. Moreover, the two courts …


The Dmca And The Privatization Of Copyright, Dave Hauser Jan 2008

The Dmca And The Privatization Of Copyright, Dave Hauser

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

With the support of recent case law, statistics, and legal analysis, this note defends the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) and its copyright protection mechanisms. The DMCA should be readily acknowledged as a push toward the privatization of copyright. Furthermore, the vast amount of criticism surrounding the DMCA wrongly shifts the focus away from what its provisions have accomplished.

This note addresses three main challenges to the DMCA's constitutionality: (1) that it exceeds the scope of Congressional authority as restrained by the Intellectual Property Clause, (2) that it oversteps the boundaries of First Amendment protection, and (3) that the doctrine …


Money Ruins Everything, John Quiggin, Dan Hunter Jan 2008

Money Ruins Everything, John Quiggin, Dan Hunter

UC Law SF Communications and Entertainment Journal

The statement, "it's hard to compete with free," encapsulates the most important recent developments in intellectual property policy and some of the most significant social trends of our time. Because amateur creators produce content for the love it and are prepared to work for free-or even to lose money to feed their desire to create-their existence threatens the economic assumptions of commercial providers of content. As a result, the rise of amateurism calls into question some fundamental assumptions we have about the public policy of innovation, the way that innovation occurs within society, and the incentives necessary to produce valuable …