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Full-Text Articles in Law
Corporate Preferences To Insiders, John C. Mccoid Ii
Corporate Preferences To Insiders, John C. Mccoid Ii
South Carolina Law Review
No abstract provided.
Germany's Legal Protection For Women Workers Vis-À-Vis Illegal Employment Discrimination In The United States: A Comparative Perspective In Light Of Johnson Controls, Carol D. Rasnic
Michigan Journal of International Law
This article will review the major German laws affecting women in the workplace, including clarification of the rationales of the German Bundestag (parliament). Comparative remarks regarding U.S. law and an analysis of Johnson Controls will place the two bodies of law in juxtaposition. Finally, an explanatory historical overview will allow the reader to draw his or her own conclusions as to the preferred view of the legal status of the working woman.
Drafting Dispute Resolution Clauses For Western Investment And Joint Ventures In Eastern Europe, Mary Theresa Kaloupek
Drafting Dispute Resolution Clauses For Western Investment And Joint Ventures In Eastern Europe, Mary Theresa Kaloupek
Michigan Journal of International Law
This Note discusses issues the practitioner should consider in drafting a dispute resolution provision for a client investing in one of the newly democratizing countries. Part I will discuss arbitration law in Eastern Europe; the dispute resolution provisions in the various foreign investment laws; the applicable national law; and each nation's enforcement procedures for arbitral awards issued in other nations. Part II reviews the dispute resolution provisions in various bilateral and multilateral treaties relating to foreign investment including the Convention on the Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID Convention) and the informal agreements between the American Arbitration Association (AAA) and the …
State Responsibility In Case Of Stabilization Clauses, F. V. Garcia-Amador
State Responsibility In Case Of Stabilization Clauses, F. V. Garcia-Amador
Florida State University Journal of Transnational Law & Policy
Modern concession agreements between States and foreign corporations sometimes contain, in addition to choice-of-law clauses, the specific commitment on the part of the contracting State not to alter the terms of the concession, by legislation or by any other means, without the consent of the other contracting party. These stipulations are usually known as "stabilization" clauses. The commitment embodied in these clauses poses a special situation from the standpoint of State responsibility. Before discussing such a situation, let us first see what is the traditional position as to the international responsibility of States for measures affecting contractual rights, and also, …