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Recent Cases, Law Review Staff Apr 1969

Recent Cases, Law Review Staff

Vanderbilt Law Review

Antitrust-Informal Price--Information Exchanges Held Violative of Sherman Act

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Conflict of Laws--"Contacts" Doctrine Applied to Supplement Federal Maritime Law in Diversity Action

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Constitutional Law--Fourteenth Amendment Prohibits Extended Postponement of Parole Consideration for State Inmate When Made on the Basis of an Unreliable Factual Determination

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Labor Law--Collective Bargaining-Employer May Not Enforce Collective Bargaining Agreement Provision Embodying Union Waiver of Employee's Right to Solicit Against That Union

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Labor Law-Remedies--NLRB May Order Retroactive Payment of Fringe Benefits Where Employer Wrongfully Refuses to Sign Collective Bargaining Agreement

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Religious Societies--First Amendment Prohibits Civil Courts From Determining Doctrinal Questions in Resolving Church …


The Problems: An Overview, Mark S. Massel Jan 1969

The Problems: An Overview, Mark S. Massel

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

Securities regulation -- domestic and foreign -- has a technical fascination for the lawyer, whether he be a practicing attorney, corporate counsel, government regulator, or legal scholar. The intricate detail of the primary regulations and of their subsidiary byways provide opportunities for stimulating mental gymnastics. The piecing together of the various phases provides interesting occasions for experimentation, speculation, and analyzation.

Yet, a preoccupation with securities regulation which overlooks the setting can produce mere academic exercise. The need for an appreciation of the setting is all-important in examining foreign securities regulation. In considering United States securities regulation we do not need …