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Full-Text Articles in Criminal Law
Two Countries In Crisis: Man Camps And The Nightmare Of Non-Indigenous Criminal Jurisdiction In The United States And Canada, Justin E. Brooks
Two Countries In Crisis: Man Camps And The Nightmare Of Non-Indigenous Criminal Jurisdiction In The United States And Canada, Justin E. Brooks
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Thousands of Indigenous women and girls have gone missing or have been found murdered across the United States and Canada; these disappearances and killings are so frequent and widespread that they have become known as the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Crisis (MMIW Crisis). Indigenous communities in both countries often lack the jurisdiction to prosecute violent crimes committed by non-Indigenous offenders against Indigenous victims on Indigenous land. Extractive industries—businesses that establish natural resource extraction projects—aggravate the problem by establishing temporary housing for large numbers of non-Indigenous, primarily male workers on or around Indigenous land (“man camps”). Violent crimes against Indigenous …
Criminal Defamation And The Evolution Of The Doctrine Of Freedom Of Expression In International Law, Jo M. Pasqualucci
Criminal Defamation And The Evolution Of The Doctrine Of Freedom Of Expression In International Law, Jo M. Pasqualucci
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Restrictions on freedom of expression may take direct and indirect forms. A state may censor speech, criminalize defamation, harass the media or individual journalists, fail to investigate crimes against the media , require the compulsory licensing of journalists, or fail to enact freedom of information laws or laws that prohibit monopoly ownership of the media. A victim of a restriction on freedom of expression that violates international law may have no recourse in domestic courts, either because state law offers no remedy or because judges are too intimidated to enforce the laws as written. In such instances, victims need recourse …
How We Should Think About The Constitutional Status Of The Suspected Terrorist Detainees At Guantanamo Bay, Akash R. Desai
How We Should Think About The Constitutional Status Of The Suspected Terrorist Detainees At Guantanamo Bay, Akash R. Desai
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
In the aftermath of the September 11th attacks, the United States has held suspected terrorist detainees captured during the military campaign in Afghanistan indefinitely at the United States military facility at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Among those currently detained are members of the al-Qaeda terrorist group and the Taliban. Currently the detainees are in the peculiar situation of generally being outside the scope of protections offered by both the international humanitarian law and the Unites States criminal law regimes.
This Note examines the extraterritorial scope of the United States Constitution as it applies to the suspected terrorist detainees at Guantanamo Bay. …
Books Received, Journal Staff
Books Received, Journal Staff
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
THE ARAB OIL WEAPON
By Jordan J. Paust & Albert P. Blaustein
Dobbs Ferry, New York: Oceana Publications, 1977. Pp. 370.$27.50.
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ARBITRATION IN SWEDEN
Stockholm: Stockholm Chamber of Commerce, 1977. Pp. 212. $25.00.
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THE DECLINE OF DEMOCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES
A Report of Missions by William J. Butler, John P. Humphrey, & G.E. Bisson. Geneva: International Commission of Jurists, 1977. Pp. 97. $4.00.
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DE-RECOGNIZING TAIWAN: THE LEGAL PROBLEMS
By Victor H. Li
Washington: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1977.Pp. 48. $1.50.
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EAST-WEST TRADE, A SOURCEBOOK ON THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS OF SOCIALIST COUNTRIES AND THEIR LEGAL …
Books Received, Journal Staff
Books Received, Journal Staff
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Chile: The Balanced View
Edited by Francisco Orrego Vicuna
Santiago: The University of Chile, 1975. Pp. 298.
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Codification in the Communist World--Symposium in Memory of Zsolt Szirmai Organized by Donald Barry, F.J.M. Feldbrugge & Dominick Lasok
Leiden: A.W. Sijthoff, 1975. Pp. xv, 353. $42.50.
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Crimes against Internationally Protected Persons: Prevention and Punishment
By Louis M. Bloomfield & Gerald F. Fitzgerald.
New York: Praeger Publishers, 1975. Pp. xviii, 272. $16.50.
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Criminal Justice in Eighteenth Century Mexico
By Colin M. MacLachlan
Berkeley: University of California Press, 1974. Pp.viii, 141. $9.00.
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EEC Anti-Trust Law--Principles and Practice
By D. Barounos, …