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Full-Text Articles in Law
Book Reviews, Werner Baer, John B. Marshall, Justin P. Wilson, Emmanuel Bello
Book Reviews, Werner Baer, John B. Marshall, Justin P. Wilson, Emmanuel Bello
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
INDIRECT TAXATION IN DEVELOPING ECONOMIES: THE ROLE AND STRUCTURE OF CUSTOMS DUTIES, EXCISES, AND SALES TAXES
By John F. Due
Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins Press, 1970. Pp. viii, 201. .$9.00
reviewer: Werner Baer
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THE INTERNATIONAL LAW OF CIVIL WAR
Edited by Richard A. Falk
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 1971. Pp. xix, 452. $15.00
reviewer: John B. Marshall
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NATIONAL INTERESTS AND THE MULTI-NATIONAL ENTERPRISE
By Jack N. Behrman
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, 1970. Pp. 194. $4.95
reviewer: Justin P. Wilson
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TRANSNATIONAL BUSINESS COLLABORATION AMONG COMMON MARKET COUNTRIES: ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR POLITICAL INTEGRATION
By Werner J. Feld
New …
Editor's Foreword, Harold G. Maier
Editor's Foreword, Harold G. Maier
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This issue of the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law includes two presentations to the 1972 Symposium of the Vanderbilt International Law Society and Regional Meeting of the American Society of International Law. First, Henry Harfield of the New York Bar discusses the relevance of international and transnational law to international commercial transactions, with a special emphasis on the usefulness of the Uniform Customs and Practices for Commercial Documentary Credits. Secondly, Sheldon S. Cohen, a member of the District of Columbia Bar and past Commissioner of Internal Revenue, focuses on the United States tax implications of changing currency values. While four …
Report On The Regional Meeting At The Vanderbilt University School Of Law, Harold G. Maier
Report On The Regional Meeting At The Vanderbilt University School Of Law, Harold G. Maier
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
This issue of the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law includes two articles that are based on papers presented at the Regional Meeting by Henry Harfield and Sheldon Cohen. Both articles deal with current and timely questions in the international commercial field. As an introduction to those papers it may be useful to comment briefly on several of the more important questions that were raised during the panel discussion of the papers which closed the conference. This may be particularly helpful in view of the fact that Professor Friedmann's untimely death prevented him from completing the revision of his remarks for …