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International Trade Law

Vanderbilt University Law School

Latin America

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

The Transfer Of Technology To Latin America, Gabriel M. Wilner Jan 1981

The Transfer Of Technology To Latin America, Gabriel M. Wilner

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

This paper focuses on the contractual acquisition of foreign technology through licenses and other contractual arrangements as contrasted with the technological components in the usual direct investment. Such investment is made either in the form of the wholly-owned subsidiary of the transnational corporation or as part of a joint venture. The use of technology as a major component of direct investment has been discouraged over the years, although this trend was reversed in Chile after 1977.

Modern legislation and practice in the regulation of technology transfer is characterized in the several Latin American countries possessing such a regime by administrative …


Government And Private Enterprise In Latin American Petroleum Development, Frank M. Lacey Jan 1976

Government And Private Enterprise In Latin American Petroleum Development, Frank M. Lacey

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

The nationalization of the Venezuelan oil industry on January 1, 1976, can be viewed in a sense as a culmination of more than half a century of striving on the part of Latin American republics to become the masters of their own most important resources, one that has seemed at times symbolic of their very destinies. It is a process that has involved nearly every major country in Latin America. It is one that has been resisted by the prevailing economic, political, and legal institutions, and in the course of which not only major business enterprises but nations as well …


Oil Operations In Latin America: The Future Of Private Enterprise, Ewell E. Murphy, Jr. Jan 1976

Oil Operations In Latin America: The Future Of Private Enterprise, Ewell E. Murphy, Jr.

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

We live in tumultuous times. Whether measured on a scale of millennia, of centuries, or of generations, our lifetime's segment of the graph of world history is marking giddy ascents, harrowing declines, and abrupt, unbridgeable discontinuities.

On a millennial scale we are entering the twilight of those five astounding centuries of Western leadership that began with the Renaissance. The flags of empire, long banished from the Americas, have now been struck in Asia and Africa as well, and flutter quaintly over only a dwindling handful of enclaves and outposts. Islam has awakened from her sleep of seven hundred years and …