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Articles 1 - 7 of 7
Full-Text Articles in Law
Comparing Implied And Express Constitutional Freedoms, David S. Bogen
Comparing Implied And Express Constitutional Freedoms, David S. Bogen
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Why Teach International Family Law In Conflicts?, William L. Reynolds
Why Teach International Family Law In Conflicts?, William L. Reynolds
Faculty Scholarship
[The author] sets forth a challenge to conflicts professors: to teach international family law in their conflict of laws classes. At present, many conflicts professors avoid teaching international family law, in part because the study of this subject is complicated by several statutes addressing particularly difficult issues. Ignorning international family law is unwise, because many United States citizens and lawyers are likely to confront such problems.
European Community Law From A U.S. Perspective, George A. Bermann
European Community Law From A U.S. Perspective, George A. Bermann
Faculty Scholarship
Although less than forty years have passed since the founding of the European Economic Community (now the European Community), the lifetime of the Community is well marked temporally. The term of each Commission furnishes a convenient time-line for measuring the Community's progress in legal integration. Since the 1970s, each year has been punctuated by two or more "summit" meetings of heads of state or government. These summits not only are key markings in their own right, but also furnish an occasion for additional monitoring of the Community's state of health. Throughout the 1970s and into the 1980s, the Community submitted …
Regulatory Decisionmaking In The European Commission, George A. Bermann
Regulatory Decisionmaking In The European Commission, George A. Bermann
Faculty Scholarship
As an institution variously described as the "motor" or "engine" of European integration and as the European Union's "executive branch," the Commission of the European Communities finds itself at the center of Community decisionmaking. Yet its decisional processes are still quite poorly understood, at least in the United States. The relatively poor grasp of Commission decisionmaking is certainly not due to any general lack of interest in procedure within the American audience. The problem lies more in the highly restrictive view of decisionmaking that traditionally dominates procedural accounts of the Community institutions. Those accounts have tended to reflect three preoccupations. …
Codifying Property Law In The Process Of Transition: Some Suggestions From Comparative Law And Economics, Ugo Mattei
Codifying Property Law In The Process Of Transition: Some Suggestions From Comparative Law And Economics, Ugo Mattei
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Comparative Law And Economics Of Penalty Clauses In Contract, Ugo Mattei
The Comparative Law And Economics Of Penalty Clauses In Contract, Ugo Mattei
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Planned Constitution Never Got Written, But Israel Still Got Constitutional Law, Marcia R. Gelpe
Planned Constitution Never Got Written, But Israel Still Got Constitutional Law, Marcia R. Gelpe
Faculty Scholarship
Israel's development of constitutional law without a written constitution presents a fascinating picture of how a system, unable to develop a constitution in the usual manner, has developed one in another manner. It shows how innovative lawmaking can be - and sometimes must be - to maintain a democratic political system.