Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Law Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2019

Faculty Publications

Marquette University Law School

Articles 1 - 6 of 6

Full-Text Articles in Law

Ad Hoc Diplomats, Ryan M. Scoville Jan 2019

Ad Hoc Diplomats, Ryan M. Scoville

Faculty Publications

Article II of the Constitution grants the president power to appoint “Ambassadors” and “other public Ministers” with the advice and consent of the Senate. By all accounts, this language requires Senate confirmation for the appointment of resident ambassadors and other diplomats of similar rank and tenure. Yet these are hardly the only agents of U.S. foreign relations. Ad hoc diplomats—individuals chosen exclusively by the president to complete limited and temporary assignments—play a comparably significant role in addressing international crises, negotiating treaties, and otherwise executing foreign policy.

This Article critically examines the appointments process for such irregular agents. An orthodox view …


Third-Class Citizenship: The Escalating Legal Consequences Of Committing A “Violent” Crime, Michael M. O'Hear Jan 2019

Third-Class Citizenship: The Escalating Legal Consequences Of Committing A “Violent” Crime, Michael M. O'Hear

Faculty Publications

For many years, American legislatures have been steadily attaching a wide range of legal consequences to convictions — and sometimes even just charges — for crimes that are classified as “violent.” These consequences affect many key aspects of the criminal process, including pretrial detention, eligibility for pretrial diversion, sentencing, eligibility for parole and other opportunities for release from incarceration, and the length and intensity of supervision in the community. The consequences can also affect a person’s legal status and rights long after the sentence for the underlying offense has been served. A conviction for a violent crime can result in …


Who Studies International Law? Explaining Cross-National Variation In Compulsory International Legal Education, Ryan M. Scoville, Mark Berlin Jan 2019

Who Studies International Law? Explaining Cross-National Variation In Compulsory International Legal Education, Ryan M. Scoville, Mark Berlin

Faculty Publications

The compulsory study of international law is a universal component of legal education in some states but extremely uncommon or non-existent in others. This article uses global data and statistical methods to test a number of conceivable explanations for this puzzling feature of international society. In contrast to much of the empirical literature on state behaviour in relation to international law, we find that functionalist and socio-political variables carry little explanatory power and that historical variables – specifically, legal tradition and regional geography – instead account for the overwhelming majority of the global pattern. We explore potential explanations for these …


Assumption Of Flood Risk, Alexander Lemann Jan 2019

Assumption Of Flood Risk, Alexander Lemann

Faculty Publications

No abstract provided.


Autonomous Vehicles, Technological Progress, And The Scope Problem In Products Liability, Alexander Lemann Jan 2019

Autonomous Vehicles, Technological Progress, And The Scope Problem In Products Liability, Alexander Lemann

Faculty Publications

Autonomous vehicles are widely expected to save tens of thousands of lives each year by making car crashes attributable to human error – currently the overwhelming majority of fatal crashes – a thing of the past. How the legal system should attribute responsibility for the (hopefully few) crashes autonomous vehicles cause is an open and hotly debated question.

Most tort scholars approach this question by asking what liability rule is most likely to achieve the desired policy outcome: promoting the adoption of this lifesaving technology without destroying manufacturers’ incentives to optimize it. This approach has led to a wide range …


Unqualified Ambassadors, Ryan M. Scoville Jan 2019

Unqualified Ambassadors, Ryan M. Scoville

Faculty Publications

In making appointments to the office of ambassador, U.S. presidents often select political supporters from outside the ranks of the State Department’s professional diplomatic corps. This practice is aberrational among advanced democracies and a source of recurrent controversy in the United States, and yet its merits and significance are substantially opaque: How do political appointees compare with career diplomats in terms of credentials? Are they less effective in office? Do they serve in some countries more than others? Have any patterns evolved over time? Commentators might assume answers to these questions, but actual evidence has been in short supply. In …