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Articles 1381 - 1389 of 1389

Full-Text Articles in Law

New Rules For Edge Act Corporations Under The International Banking Act Of 1978, James T. Tynion Iii Jan 1979

New Rules For Edge Act Corporations Under The International Banking Act Of 1978, James T. Tynion Iii

Fordham International Law Journal

Discusses the intent behind and the provisions of the Edge Act as well as the application of the Act to American international banking practices for the past sixty years.


A Statement Of Moral Purpose: The 1948 Genocide Convention, Michael P. Murphy Jan 1978

A Statement Of Moral Purpose: The 1948 Genocide Convention, Michael P. Murphy

Fordham International Law Journal

Genocide was declared an international crime in 1946. In response to this declaration, the Convention on Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide was adopted in 1948. Although 28 years have passed, the United States has not yet determined its position, with respect to the Convention and this international compact is still pending before the Senate. This article is concerned primarily with the probable impact of the United States' position on the Genocide Convention in light of international law and relations. The body of the Convention is discussed and analyzed along with three proposed United States' understandings. It is …


The Decline Of Democracy In The Philippines, Mark Tobak Jan 1978

The Decline Of Democracy In The Philippines, Mark Tobak

Fordham International Law Journal

No abstract provided.


The Right To Asylum And The Indochinese Refugee, Edmond L. Papantonio Jan 1978

The Right To Asylum And The Indochinese Refugee, Edmond L. Papantonio

Fordham International Law Journal

This note is concerned primarily with asylum, i.e., the acceptance of an individual by a country of refuge, as well as how a refugee is to be treated after asylum has been granted. Although each of these issues can be analyzed in both legal and moral terms, the lack of any enforcement agency of procedures restricts their efficacy as rights in the traditional legal sense. Ultimately, as moral rights, their effectiveness depends upon the generosity of the accepting nation.


Legal Implications Of Population Control: A Practical Reevaluation Of Some Human Rights Considerations, Susan C. Eisenhauer Jan 1978

Legal Implications Of Population Control: A Practical Reevaluation Of Some Human Rights Considerations, Susan C. Eisenhauer

Fordham International Law Journal

In recent years, much attention has been devoted to the problems of overpopulation and attempts at slowing population growth. The number of people is expanding at an alarming rate, thereby threatening the physical environment as well as the quality of human life. The United Nations has not adequately dealt with the population problems. This paper outlines the existing problem and its ramifications, and discussses the UN position regarding human rights in the area of family planning. Questions are raised, as to what the rights consist of, if they are absolute, and if protection of the quality of life should limit …


The U.S.-Soviet Maritime Agreement: A New Plan For Bilateral Cooperation, Jean S. Gerard Jan 1977

The U.S.-Soviet Maritime Agreement: A New Plan For Bilateral Cooperation, Jean S. Gerard

Fordham International Law Journal

The author starts with the premise that the U.S.-Soviet Maritime Agreement, which was signed on October 14, 1972, and renegotiated as of December 19, 1972, is unique. Before the agreement was signed, only about 6 percent of U.S.-Soviet trade was being carried in U.S. bottoms, whereas 94 percent was being carried in Soviet bottoms. The author highlights that one significant achievement of the Agreement was the reciprocal opening to access of forty U.S. ports and forty Soviet ports by commercial, scientific, and merchant marine training ships of the two nations upon four days advance notive. The selection of ports was …


The Defection Of Viktor Belenko: The Use Of International Law To Justify Political Decisions, James P. Eyster, Ii Jan 1977

The Defection Of Viktor Belenko: The Use Of International Law To Justify Political Decisions, James P. Eyster, Ii

Fordham International Law Journal

This article explores how Japan, the Soviet Union, and the United States, at the time of publication, had used international law to justify political decisions.


The Emerging Moral Framework Of International Law, Peter L. Destefano, Jr. Jan 1977

The Emerging Moral Framework Of International Law, Peter L. Destefano, Jr.

Fordham International Law Journal

This article explores the idea that, at the time of publication, despite several centuries of development, there was no settled conception of international law, whether there was “international law” and if there was, what were its essential characteristics. The author starts with the assertion that international law resembles a municipal legal system, insofar as its subjects are bound, by external sanctions, to its right-creating and power-conferring principles. A State will, in a well-ordered international community, be shaped and guided in its acts and judgments by an internal sense of right and justice; just as the punishment of a child will …


Emerging Data Protection In Europe; Community Law Through The Cases, Albert J. Kostelny, Jr. Jan 1977

Emerging Data Protection In Europe; Community Law Through The Cases, Albert J. Kostelny, Jr.

Fordham International Law Journal

No abstract provided.