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Articles 1 - 9 of 9
Full-Text Articles in Transnational Law
Progress In International Law - An Explanation Of The Project, Russell Miller
Progress In International Law - An Explanation Of The Project, Russell Miller
Russell A. Miller
No abstract provided.
Hamdan V. Rumsfeld, Russell Miller
Comparative Law And Germany's Militant Democracy, Russell Miller
Comparative Law And Germany's Militant Democracy, Russell Miller
Russell A. Miller
No abstract provided.
Introduction: U.S. National Security, Intelligence And Democracy: From The Church Committee To The War On Terror, Russell Miller
Introduction: U.S. National Security, Intelligence And Democracy: From The Church Committee To The War On Terror, Russell Miller
Russell A. Miller
No abstract provided.
Paradoxes Of Personality: Transnational Corporations, Non-Governmental Organizations And Human Rights In International Law, Russell Miller
Paradoxes Of Personality: Transnational Corporations, Non-Governmental Organizations And Human Rights In International Law, Russell Miller
Russell A. Miller
No abstract provided.
Foreword: Making A Case For Comparative Constitutionalism And Transnational Law, Craig M. Scott, Peer Zumbansen
Foreword: Making A Case For Comparative Constitutionalism And Transnational Law, Craig M. Scott, Peer Zumbansen
Peer Zumbansen
Conceptualizing Complicity In Alien Tort Cases, Chimene I. Keitner
Conceptualizing Complicity In Alien Tort Cases, Chimene I. Keitner
Chimene I Keitner
No abstract provided.
Foreword: Making A Case For Comparative Constitutionalism And Transnational Law, Craig M. Scott, Peer Zumbansen
Foreword: Making A Case For Comparative Constitutionalism And Transnational Law, Craig M. Scott, Peer Zumbansen
Craig M. Scott
The Future Regulation Of The Legal Profession: The Impact Of Treating The Legal Profession As 'Service Providers', Laurel S. Terry
The Future Regulation Of The Legal Profession: The Impact Of Treating The Legal Profession As 'Service Providers', Laurel S. Terry
Laurel S. Terry
In the past fifty years, one has heard debates about whether law is a business, a profession, or both, what these terms mean and whether it matters. Regardless of what one thinks about these debates, there is a new paradigm that must be added to the mix, which is the paradigm of lawyers as "service providers." In the "service providers" paradigm, the legal profession is not viewed as a separate, unique profession entitled to its own individual regulations, but is included in a broader group of "service providers," all of whom can be regulated together. This new paradigm represents a …