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Full-Text Articles in Law
Space Communications And The Law: Adequate International Control After 1963?, Samuel D. Estep, Amalya L. Kearse
Space Communications And The Law: Adequate International Control After 1963?, Samuel D. Estep, Amalya L. Kearse
Michigan Law Review
During the current year, a space event of legal and technological significance will occur. The American Telephone and Telegraph Company (A.T. & T.), using the launching facilities of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), will launch its first satellite for research in the area of commercial communications.† The A.T. & T. sphere will be the first tested by a private, commercial organization specifically for business purposes- to implement a plan eventually to provide increased and improved telecommunications on a grand scale at a lower cost. The satellite will relay television signals from the United States to England, Germany, and …
Extraterritorial Effects Of Confiscations And Expropriations, Ignaz Seidl-Hohenvelden
Extraterritorial Effects Of Confiscations And Expropriations, Ignaz Seidl-Hohenvelden
Michigan Law Review
The study of the problem of extraterritorial effects of confiscations and expropriations from the point of view of Comparative Law has special practical importance. There are hardly any codified rules applicable to foreign confiscations and expropriations, either in statutory law countries or in common law countries. Hence, decisions have to be based largely on generally accepted rules of public and private international law. Such general acceptance can only be proved by a comparative analysis of foreign as well as of domestic precedents.
Extraterritorial Effects Of Confiscations And Expropriations, Ignaz Seidl-Hohenvelden
Extraterritorial Effects Of Confiscations And Expropriations, Ignaz Seidl-Hohenvelden
Michigan Law Review
The study of the problem of extraterritorial effects of confiscations and expropriations from the point of view of Comparative Law has special practical importance. There are hardly any codified rules applicable to foreign confiscations and expropriations, either in statutory law countries or in common law countries. Hence, decisions have to be based largely on generally accepted rules of public and private international law. Such general acceptance can only be proved by a comparative analysis of foreign as well as of domestic precedents.