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Articles 31 - 34 of 34

Full-Text Articles in Law

Educational Choice New York City Style: A Study Of The New York City School Choice Programs, Mitchell Edwards Jan 1999

Educational Choice New York City Style: A Study Of The New York City School Choice Programs, Mitchell Edwards

Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy

No abstract provided.


Transnational Convergence: European Union And American Federalism, Patrick R. Hugg Jan 1999

Transnational Convergence: European Union And American Federalism, Patrick R. Hugg

Cornell International Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Unilateral Effects Analysis In Assessing Anti-Competitive Mergers: The Judicially Approved New Approach To Challenging Mergers, Thomas J. Burton Jan 1999

Unilateral Effects Analysis In Assessing Anti-Competitive Mergers: The Judicially Approved New Approach To Challenging Mergers, Thomas J. Burton

Saint Louis University Law Journal

No abstract provided.


Cooperation In International Bankruptcy: A Post-Universalist Approach, Lynn M. Lopucki Jan 1999

Cooperation In International Bankruptcy: A Post-Universalist Approach, Lynn M. Lopucki

UF Law Faculty Publications

This article examines the several competing systems proposed for international cooperation in the bankruptcy cases of multinational companies and concludes that a cooperative form of territoriality would work best. Universalism, the system that currently dominates the scholarship, diplomacy, and jurisprudence of international bankruptcy, holds that the courts of the multinational company's "home country" should have worldwide jurisdiction and apply its own law to the core issues of the case. Universalism is unworkable because it would require that countries permit foreign law and courts to govern wholly domestic relationships and because the of "home countries" of multinational companies are so ephemeral …