Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Administrative Procedure Act (1)
- Admissibility (1)
- Authority (1)
- Burden of production (1)
- Decision making (1)
-
- Deference (1)
- Dispute resolution (1)
- Due process (1)
- Exclusions (1)
- Federal agencies (1)
- Foreign reciprocity requirements (1)
- Foreign-money judgments (1)
- Fraud (1)
- Game theory (1)
- Hearsay (1)
- In personam jurisdiction (1)
- In rem jurisdiction (1)
- Judicial deference (1)
- Legislative reform (1)
- Litigation (1)
- Procedural rules of enforcement (1)
- Regulation (1)
- Responsibility (1)
- Rulemaking (1)
- Testimony (1)
- Treaties (1)
- Uniform Foreign Judgments Act (1)
- Uniform Foreign Money-Judgements Recognition Act (1)
- Witnesses (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Enforcement Of Foreign Money-Judgments In The United States: In Search Of Uniformity And International Acceptance, Ronald A. Brand
Enforcement Of Foreign Money-Judgments In The United States: In Search Of Uniformity And International Acceptance, Ronald A. Brand
Articles
When international trade and investment increase, so does the need for satisfactory means of dispute resolution. Dispute resolution in national courts requires that litigants consider not only the likelihood of a favorable judgment but also the ability to collect on that judgment. In cases where the defendant’s assets lie in another jurisdiction, collection is possible only if the second jurisdiction will recognize the first jurisdiction’s judgment.
In the international arena, enforcement of United State judgments overseas is often possible only if the United States court rendering the judgment would enforce a similar decision of the foreign enforcing court. This reciprocity …
Authority And Responsibility: The Jurisprudence Of Deference, Joseph Vining
Authority And Responsibility: The Jurisprudence Of Deference, Joseph Vining
Articles
he connection between authority and responsibility is such that the one cannot be thought of without the other. In legal method, close reading and rereading of a text marks it as an authoritative text; the presupposition of mind which is necessary to close reading is presupposition of a responsible mind. In the working of institutions that embody authority, the disposition to follow the decisions and statements of a person responsible for a matter inevitably rests upon a presupposition that the decisions and statements followed are those of the responsible person. As that presupposition fades with bureaucratization of decision and writing, …
Improving The Procedure For Resolving Hearsay Issues, Richard D. Friedman
Improving The Procedure For Resolving Hearsay Issues, Richard D. Friedman
Articles
In this article, I propose two changes in the way hearsay issues are usually resolved. First, in some circumstances courts should divide the burdens of producing the declarant-for example, by imposing the physical burden on the proponent and the financial burden on the opponent. Second, no matter how the declarant is produced as a witness, she should ordinarily testify as part of the proponent's case, subject to cross-examination by the opponent. If the declarant does become a witness, the admissibility of her out-of-court statement should not be resolved until her current testimony about the underlying events is received.