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Articles 31 - 38 of 38
Full-Text Articles in Law
Teen Prostitution In Japan: Regulation Of Telephone Clubs, Andrew D. Morrison
Teen Prostitution In Japan: Regulation Of Telephone Clubs, Andrew D. Morrison
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
The history of prostitution in Japan may be traced to the eighth century. Originally, prostitutes carried on their trade individually and independently. Around the thirteenth century, however, the nature of prostitution changed, as prostitutes formed small enterprises located in red-light districts. By the seventeenth century, red-light districts existed throughout Japan.
In 1900, the Japanese government, realizing the widespread proliferation of the prostitution industry, passed the Regulation for Control of Prostitutes. The law regulated prostitution nationwide by requiring prostitutes to register with local government authorities and to undergo regular health inspections. This system continued until the end of World War Two, …
The Future Of The World Health Organization: What Role For International Law?, David P. Fidler
The Future Of The World Health Organization: What Role For International Law?, David P. Fidler
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This Article has tried to provide a comprehensive analysis of the role of international law in WHO's future. Whether WHO realizes it, international law has had and will continue to have effects on international health policy. In the future, WHO has a choice: It can continue to act as if international law plays no role in global public health or it can build the commitment and capacity needed to integrate international law into its endeavors and into the creation of global health jurisprudence. Building such commitment and capacity will not resurrect WHO to its past glories, but they may very …
Ireland's Abortion Information Act Of 1995, Keith S. Koegler
Ireland's Abortion Information Act Of 1995, Keith S. Koegler
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
On May 12, 1995, the Supreme Court of Ireland upheld an act making it legal to disseminate information concerning abortion services abroad, provided that the information does not advocate or promote the termination of the pregnancy. While the Abortion Information Act of 1995 is likely to make it easier for an Irish woman to obtain an abortion overseas, it does not change the circumstances under which a woman may obtain an abortion in Ireland. Under the Eighth Amendment to the Irish Constitution, as interpreted by the Irish Supreme Court, abortion is illegal except where the pregnancy poses a substantial risk …
Tobacco Proves Addictive: The European Community's Stalled Proposal To Ban Tobacco Advertising, Jennifer A. Lesny
Tobacco Proves Addictive: The European Community's Stalled Proposal To Ban Tobacco Advertising, Jennifer A. Lesny
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This Note examines the recent initiative to ban tobacco advertising within the European Community. The Note first addresses the European Commission's proposed directive, exploring the Commission's stated justifications as well as the opposing member states' procedural and legal objections. This Note then analyzes the European Community debate by comparing it to the United States movement to ban tobacco advertising. The author concludes that, like its United States counterpart, the European proposal is ill-fated, and that failure to reach a consensus on controversial proposals such as the tobacco advertising ban seriously undermines completion of a true internal market envisioned in the …
Books Received, Law Review Staff
Books Received, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
SYSTEMS OF CONTROL IN INTERNATIONAL ADJUDICATION AND ARBITRATION
By W. Michael Reisman
Durham and London: Duke University Press, 1992. Pp. 174.
LEGISLATIVE RESPONSES TO TOBACCO USE
By World Health Organization Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1991.Pp. 226.
IMPORT AND CUSTOMS LAW HANDBOOK
By Michael J. Horton
New York, New York: Quorom Books, 1992. Pp. 308. $55.00.
THE LAW AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT IN THE THIRD WORLD
Edited by P. Ebow Bondzi-Simpson
New York, New York: Praeger Publishers 1992. Pp. 200. $49.95.
Case Digest, Law Review Staff
Case Digest, Law Review Staff
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Agency for International Development's Adoption of Policy Placing Abortion-Related Restrictions on Grants to Nongovernmental Organizations Upheld DKT Memorial Fund Ltd. v. Agency for International Development 887 F.2d 275 (D.C. Cir.1989)
Federal Long-Arm Statute Authorizes Assertion of Personal Jurisdiction over Foreign Holder of United States Patent in Patent Ownership Suit National Patent Development Corporation v. T.J. Smith & Nephew Ltd. 877 F.2d 1003 (D.C. Cir.1989) (en banc)
Venue over Alien Defendants in Antitrust Suit Proper in any United States Federal District Court under Alien Venue AcT-Go-Video, Inc. v. Akai Electric Co., Ltd. 885 F.2d 1406(9th Cir. 1989)
INS Oral Notice to …
Potentially Hazardous Merchandise: Domestic And International Mechanisms For Consumer Protection, Eric Shuman
Potentially Hazardous Merchandise: Domestic And International Mechanisms For Consumer Protection, Eric Shuman
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Health disorders engendered by hazardous, exported foods, pesticides, drugs, and other products recently have attracted worldwide attention. The exportation of products which have been banned or highly restricted in their country of origin or which become hazardous in the environment of the importing nation is a popular issue for opponents of a perceived monolithic transnational industrial complex, as well as for critics of certain United States corporations. A more widely shared opinion is that the United States has a moral obligation to limit foreseeable harm from the export of potentially hazardous merchandise or at least to supply product hazard information. …
Acid Precipitation In North America: The Case For Transboundary Cooperation, Douglas M. Johnston, Peter Finkle
Acid Precipitation In North America: The Case For Transboundary Cooperation, Douglas M. Johnston, Peter Finkle
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Long-range air pollution has emerged as a serious environmental problem in Europe and North America since the early 1950s. The most critical aspect of this problem is the movement over very long distances of airborne pollutants which eventually are deposited in harmful acid compounds. These pollutants originate in a multiplicity of stationary and mobile emission sources. Because the original pollutants undergo chemical changes during the atmospheric transport, the pollutants which ultimately cause damage are chemically different from the original emissions. Moreover, the pollutants, which are usually deposited in the form of rain or snow, cause harm only in special physical …