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Fordham Law School

Fordham International Law Journal

2002

Articles 1 - 30 of 48

Full-Text Articles in Law

Well-Known Trademark Protection In The People's Republic Of China — Evolution Of The System, Edward Eugene Lehman, Camilla Ojansivu, Stan Abrams Jan 2002

Well-Known Trademark Protection In The People's Republic Of China — Evolution Of The System, Edward Eugene Lehman, Camilla Ojansivu, Stan Abrams

Fordham International Law Journal

Protection of intellectual property is an integral part of China's economic reform policy. It paves the way for faster development of science, technology, and culture and creates a stronger basis for the Chinese market economy. With the rapid development of China's economy, culminating in China's entry into the World Trade Organization (“WTO”), and the pressure put to bear from multinational corporations and the governments of developed countries, the Chinese government has become aware that protection of well-known trademarks pursuant to the standards of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights of the WTO (“TRIPS” or “TRIPS Agreement” or …


The Harmonization Game: What Basketball Can Teach About Intellectual Property And International Trade, Peter K. Yu Jan 2002

The Harmonization Game: What Basketball Can Teach About Intellectual Property And International Trade, Peter K. Yu

Fordham International Law Journal

In the recent World Men's Basketball Championships in Indianapolis, Team USA found out painfully that the international game is very different from what they play at home and that the gap between USA Basketball and the rest of the world has been closing. While the United States' losses might have a significant impact on how the country will prepare for the 2004 Olympics in Athens and on how Americans train youngsters to play basketball, their teachings go beyond basketball. The international harmonization process is a game with different rules, different officials, and players with different visions and mindsets. By watching …


Bringing Ireland Up To Par: Incorporating The European Convention For The Protection Of Human Rights And Fundamental Freedoms, Katherine Lesch Bodnick Jan 2002

Bringing Ireland Up To Par: Incorporating The European Convention For The Protection Of Human Rights And Fundamental Freedoms, Katherine Lesch Bodnick

Fordham International Law Journal

In the Good Friday Agreement of 1998, the Irish government committed to incorporating the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“ECHR”) into Ireland's domestic law. Ireland's promise to promote human rights is consistent with the Good Friday Agreement. Although the government agreed to incorporate the ECHR by October 1999, it has yet to be incorporated because Attorney-General Michael McDowell and Minister of Justice John O'Donoghue could not decide how to do so. This Note examines the manner in which Ireland should incorporate the ECHR into Irish domestic law. Part I of this Note discusses background …


Selective Justice: The Case Of Israel And The Occupied Territories, Kathleen A. Cavanaugh Jan 2002

Selective Justice: The Case Of Israel And The Occupied Territories, Kathleen A. Cavanaugh

Fordham International Law Journal

While the focus in transitional justice literature is most often on functional or quasi-functional processes, this Article turns to the rather less explored path of dysfunctional transitions through the lens of the Israeli/Palestinian case. The stop and start nature of the "transition" from a conflict to the post-conflict process has reverted to a situation that the Israeli government has recently described as an 'armed conflict short of war." Against this backdrop, this Article provides insight into the role of law or its absence in transitioning conflict. As there are conflicting Israeli and Palestinian arguments regarding the legitimacy of Israeli occupation …


The Government Of Memory: Public Inquiries And The Limits Of Justice In Northern Ireland, Angela Hegarty Jan 2002

The Government Of Memory: Public Inquiries And The Limits Of Justice In Northern Ireland, Angela Hegarty

Fordham International Law Journal

The purpose of this Article is to examine the exercise and the usefulness of the public inquiry model, in the Northern Ireland conflict. This Article examines its role as both an accountability mechanism and a truth process, and in doing so I consider the proposition that public inquiries are employed by governments not as a tool to find truth and establish accountability for human rights violations, but as a way of deflecting criticism and avoiding blame.


Unjust Order: Malaysia's Internal Security Act, Nicole Fritz, Martin Flaherty Jan 2002

Unjust Order: Malaysia's Internal Security Act, Nicole Fritz, Martin Flaherty

Fordham International Law Journal

This Report represents the culmination of a year-long project undertaken by the Crowley Program to update the study of the use and impact of the Internal Security Act (ISA) in Malaysia in light of international law obligations. We reference first those international commitments that Malaysia has expressly adopted. However, these are very few--reflecting the antipathy felt by the Malaysian government for international obligations of this sort. Additionally, we have made reference to the generally-accepted international law provisions applicable in this context--intended both to demonstrate the extent to which the ISA deviates from widely-upheld international norms, even if those norms are …


Using One's Head To Sustain One's Heart: A New Focus For The Establishment Of The Caribbean Court Of Justice, Neil Dennis Jan 2002

Using One's Head To Sustain One's Heart: A New Focus For The Establishment Of The Caribbean Court Of Justice, Neil Dennis

Fordham International Law Journal

This Note focuses on the reasonableness of placing the sovereignty argument at the forefront of the Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) debate instead of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) Single Market and Economy (CSME) argument. The reason being is the CSME cannot exist without the CCJ. Part I discusses the background of both the CCJ & the CSME. Part II analyzes the arguments of sovereignty and the CSME for the establishment of the CCJ. Part III advocates that it is wise to argue rationally, in today's age of globalization, rather than emotionally.


Overextending Immunity: Arbitral Institutional Liability In The United States, England, And France, Matthew Rasmussen Jan 2002

Overextending Immunity: Arbitral Institutional Liability In The United States, England, And France, Matthew Rasmussen

Fordham International Law Journal

This Note examines the relationship between the arbitral institution and the disputing parties. Part I demonstrates the decisions parties face when choosing between traditional litigation and arbitration; it also discusses the differences between an arbitral institution and an ad hoc arbitration, as well as major arbitral institutions' rules regarding their own liability. Part II introduces several nations' approaches to judicial immunity, and how it is applied to arbitrators and arbitral institutions. Part II also weighs differing views on how to characterize the relationship between disputing parties and the arbitral institution. Finally, Part II discusses several key criticisms to the immunity …


The Fifth Enlargement Of The European Union: The Power Of Example, Eneko Landaburu Jan 2002

The Fifth Enlargement Of The European Union: The Power Of Example, Eneko Landaburu

Fordham International Law Journal

After the dust cleared in the early 1990s, the institutional framework for realizing the peaceful unification of Europe was laid down at the Copenhagen European Council in June 1993. The statement by the EU at Copenhagen that it was ready to accept new members that fulfill certain criteria led to applications from ten countries of Central and Eastern Europe. As laid down in the Treaties, it fell to the Commission to provide advice on these applications to the Member States of the EU, which it did in July of 1997 in its ambitious program of reform, known as Agenda 2000. …


Defining Legitimate Competition: How To Clarify Pricing Abuses Under Article 82 Ec, John Temple Lang, Robert O'Donoghue Jan 2002

Defining Legitimate Competition: How To Clarify Pricing Abuses Under Article 82 Ec, John Temple Lang, Robert O'Donoghue

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article discusses the principles under Article 82 of the Treaty Establishing the European Community concerning anticompetitive or exclusionary abuses involving pricing issues. This Article is structured as follows. Part I outlines the basic economic thinking behind price discrimination and identifies the principal legal situations under Article 82 in which it arises. Discriminatory pricing should only be prohibited (and therefore needs to be justified) in a small number of situations. Parts II-III discuss the specific situations under Community competition law in which price discrimination and the legality of pricing practices may be relevant. Part II discusses rebate and discounting practices, …


Standards For Standards, Maurits Dolmans Jan 2002

Standards For Standards, Maurits Dolmans

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article discusses the application of European competition law to standardization activities and associated Intellectual Property Rights (“IPR”) Policies and licensing arrangements. It briefly discusses the objectives of standardization activities in Europe and contains a general introduction into relevant principles of European Community (“EC”) competition law. This is followed by a review of principles and antitrust case law relating to: (a) restrictions on membership and access to the standardization process; (b) possible spill-over effects; (c) standard depth and over-standardization; (d) selection of technology for standards; (e) access to standards information and essential IPRs; (f) IPR Policies and problems associated with …


Sentencing Guidelines For Copyright Pirates In The United States And The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: A Comparative Perspective, Jonathan J. Rusch Jan 2002

Sentencing Guidelines For Copyright Pirates In The United States And The Hong Kong Special Administrative Region: A Comparative Perspective, Jonathan J. Rusch

Fordham International Law Journal

As more and more nations prosecute copyright piracy cases, it is far from clear whether these nations, in seeking to protect legitimate copyright interests, will also recognize the need to achieve three goals in the sentencing of such cases. The first is honesty in sentencing: that is, avoiding situations in which the nominal sentence that a court initially imposes at sentencing may later be substantially reduced through the parole process. The second is reasonable uniformity in sentencing, so that courts do not have wide disparities in the sentences they impose on similar offenders who commit similar criminal offenses. The third …


An Analysis Of The United States-Cuba "Havana Club" Rum Case Before The World Trade Organization, Donald R. Dinan Jan 2002

An Analysis Of The United States-Cuba "Havana Club" Rum Case Before The World Trade Organization, Donald R. Dinan

Fordham International Law Journal

The United States-Cuba “Havana Club” trademark dispute has been one of the more controversial and potentially divisive cases before the World Trade Organization ('WTO') to date. In that case, the European Union ('EU') filed a complaint against the United States alleging that a law which prohibited the registration and enforcement in the United States of a Cuban trademark, 'Havana Club' rum, which was licensed to the French company, Pernod-Ricard, S.A. ('Pernod-Ricard'), was in violation of the WTO Agreement, which protected the intellectual property rights of WTO Members and their nationals. The case intertwined enforcement of the U.S. Cuban embargo; U.S. …


Self-Determination And Minority Rights, Frances Raday Jan 2002

Self-Determination And Minority Rights, Frances Raday

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article tries to wend its way through the trail of human debris, the visions and the shattered dreams on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, to a rational analysis of the applicability of international human rights norms, to the conflicting claims of two peoples to the same land. The right of both Jews and Palestinians to self-determination seems to be self-evident from the stories of the two peoples. Almost forty years after the Six Days War, the author turns to this issue in an attempt to analyze where this conflict now stands in terms of international human rights. This …


Rules Of Origin As Trade Or Foreign Policy Instruments? The European Union Policy On Products Manufactured In The Settlements In The West Bank And The Gaza Strip, Moshe Hirsch Jan 2002

Rules Of Origin As Trade Or Foreign Policy Instruments? The European Union Policy On Products Manufactured In The Settlements In The West Bank And The Gaza Strip, Moshe Hirsch

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article aims to shed some light on linkage between rules of origin and territorial disputes, and to analyze the alternative approaches available to policy makers in such cases. The choice between these alternatives is closely related to the broader subject of the interrelationships between international trade law and politics, which this Article will also address. It should be emphasized at the outset that this Article does not aim to address the substantive territorial disputes regarding the West Bank and the Gaza Strip (nor the legality of the settlements located therein), Western Sahara, Taiwan, Northern Cyprus, or other disputed territories. …


The Transition From Tradition To Reform: The Shari'a Appeals Court Rulings On Child Custody (1992-2001), Moussa Abou Ramadan Jan 2002

The Transition From Tradition To Reform: The Shari'a Appeals Court Rulings On Child Custody (1992-2001), Moussa Abou Ramadan

Fordham International Law Journal

The principal object of this Article is to demonstrate that Islamic law, like any system of law, is dynamic rather than static. Islamic law cannot be thought of as law disconnected from history and society. Like any other legal system, it is influenced by political, economic and social factors. In order to illustrate this idea, this Article takes as a case study the rulings concerning custody of the Shari'a Appeals Court in Israel. This Article surveys the rulings of the Shari'a Appeals Court addressing child custody from 1992 through 2001. This Article's central claim is that the Appeals Court's approach …


Reclaiming The "Little Bees" And The "Little Bells": Colombia's Failure To Adhere To And Enforce International And Domestic Laws In Preventing Recruitment Of Child Soldiers, Veronica Escobar Jan 2002

Reclaiming The "Little Bees" And The "Little Bells": Colombia's Failure To Adhere To And Enforce International And Domestic Laws In Preventing Recruitment Of Child Soldiers, Veronica Escobar

Fordham International Law Journal

This Comment addresses the recruitment of Colombian children into the insurgent armed groups and the Colombian government's attempts to respond to the issue. Part I provides an overview of the worldwide child soldier epidemic, specifically of the Colombian child soldier. Part I also addresses the general history of the civil strife in Colombia and the impact on the lives of the country's children. Part II describes the existing international laws that protect civilians and children during internal armed conflicts, as well as those laws that address child combatants specifically. Part II also analyzes the Colombian government's response to the child …


Transitional Justice In A New Era, Ruti G. Teitel Jan 2002

Transitional Justice In A New Era, Ruti G. Teitel

Fordham International Law Journal

This Essay offers an evaluation of the status of transitional justice in the wake of the new century and millennium. This Essay analyzes the evolution and direction of transitional justice in the new era and makes three observations about the current directions in transitional justice developments. Part I contend that while transitional justice is associated with a universal rights discourse, in recent decades of heightened transition, the conception of transitional justice has been closely associated with diverse nation-building projects and related local understandings of the rule of law and legitimacy. Part II addresses the ways contemporary transitional justice reflects its …


On Law, Politics And Contemporary Constitutionalism, Colin Harvey Jan 2002

On Law, Politics And Contemporary Constitutionalism, Colin Harvey

Fordham International Law Journal

Is the political process, with all its difficulties, merely reflective of contemporary constitutionalism? Are the problems an aspect of ongoing inter-communal dialogue? To what extent are existing difficulties exacerbated by a general failure to grasp the difference between the logic of law and political theory and practice? These questions are addressed here in three basic stages: first, the relationship between legal logic and political practice is examined; secondly, the implications of contemporary constitutionalism are explored; and, finally, the agreement and disagreements over its implementation are analyzed.


Transitional Policing Arrangements In Northern Ireland: The Can't And The Won't Of The Change Dialectic, Mary O'Rawe Jan 2002

Transitional Policing Arrangements In Northern Ireland: The Can't And The Won't Of The Change Dialectic, Mary O'Rawe

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article will chart the extent to which this phenomenon has been and is recurring in Northern Ireland since the period of the 1994 Irish Republican Army ("IRA") ceasefire. It will examine the dangers in underestimating the capacity of institutions, structures, and individuals to resist change. It will also explore the potential of such resistance to claw back gains that on the face of it have already been made in formal inter-party negotiations. In the process, the Article will seek to identify why real change in policing is both so important and so difficult in a society seeking to leave …


Going, Going, Gone: Sealing The Fate Of The Fourth Amendment, Michael P. O'Connor, Celia Rumann Jan 2002

Going, Going, Gone: Sealing The Fate Of The Fourth Amendment, Michael P. O'Connor, Celia Rumann

Fordham International Law Journal

We will begin by analyzing the history of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), discuss the context of the two recently published decisions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC) and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court of Review FISCR, respectively, before analyzing the In re Sealed Case decision in light of the requirements of the Fourth Amendment. Ultimately, we conclude that FISA, as amended by Congress in the USA PATRIOT Act, and as interpreted by the FISCR, is unconstitutional in that it offends the requirements of the Fourth Amendment.


The Biggest Peace: The Structure Of The Palestinian Legislative Council And The Politics Of Separation, Michel Paradis Jan 2002

The Biggest Peace: The Structure Of The Palestinian Legislative Council And The Politics Of Separation, Michel Paradis

Fordham International Law Journal

Part I of this Note summarizes the background leading up to the signing of the Oslo Accords. Part II details the overall structure and responsibilities laid out in Oslo II, with specific emphasis on the legal. Also, Part II presents for comparison the semi-autonomy arrangement devised and implemented in the Transkei of South Africa in the early 1960s. Part II concludes by examining the extent to which both of these arrangements were successful in satisfying the parties involved and makes some more general comparisons to similar reactions in Northern Ireland following the Good Friday Agreement. Part III attempts to draw …


Preventing, Punishing And Eliminating Terrorism In The Western Hemisphere: A Post-9/11 Inter-American Treaty, Enrique Lagos, Timothy D. Rudy Jan 2002

Preventing, Punishing And Eliminating Terrorism In The Western Hemisphere: A Post-9/11 Inter-American Treaty, Enrique Lagos, Timothy D. Rudy

Fordham International Law Journal

Part I of this Article will provide a brief background to the fight against terrorism as seen from an inter-American legal and institutional standpoint. Part II will discuss the more significant details of the Convention and the negotiations in the Permanent Council's Working Group that produced it. In II(A), the authors review the conflicting views among delegates about whether the OAS should have been negotiating a “comprehensive” anti-terrorism treaty (complete with a legal definition of terrorist acts) or follow the suggestion of the United States and adopt a less ambitious treaty providing some “added value” (by incorporating by reference the …


The Challenges Of Fighting Global Organized Crime In Latin America, Luz Estella Nagle Jan 2002

The Challenges Of Fighting Global Organized Crime In Latin America, Luz Estella Nagle

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article examines organized crime in Iberoamerica. It also examines the international mechanisms implemented to combat it, specifically the 1988 United Nations Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances, the 1996 Organization of American States Inter-American Convention against Corruption of 1996, and the United Nations Convention on Transnational Organized Crime of 2000. It then examines whether these efforts have been successful or unsuccessful, and whether multilateral instruments are a formidable tool in the war against international organized crime or merely toothless tigers.


The European Union In The World — A Community Of Values, John Richardson Jan 2002

The European Union In The World — A Community Of Values, John Richardson

Fordham International Law Journal

These are momentous times in Europe. The Euro has been successfully introduced, the enlargement negotiations are approaching their climax, and the European Convention (“Convention”) is moving towards the drafting of a constitution for a new, continent-wide political entity. At the same time, unrest is manifest, particularly in two areas. On the one hand, many of our citizens, and not just the political elites, are dissatisfied with Europe's performance on the world stage and are concerned about the maintenance of peace and security within the Union. In these areas they would like to see a strengthened, more effective entity-- “more Europe.” …


From Common Market To European Union: The New Europe's Place In The Trading World, Mogens Peter Carl Jan 2002

From Common Market To European Union: The New Europe's Place In The Trading World, Mogens Peter Carl

Fordham International Law Journal

What are the philosophical, political, legal and institutional bases for Europe's economic relations with the rest of the world? How have they developed over time, as Europe has moved from the narrow, sectoral basis of the recently defunct European Coal and Steel Community (“ECSC”), to the radical innovation of the European Economic Community (“EEC”), which itself has become part of the wider, politically even more ambitious integrationist structure of the European Union (“EU”), now itself on the verge of a radical expansion of its size? Does today's EU have as much or less in common with the ECSC as a …


Regulating Financial Services In Europe: A New Approach, John F. Mogg Jan 2002

Regulating Financial Services In Europe: A New Approach, John F. Mogg

Fordham International Law Journal

In March 2000, European leaders met in Lisbon, Portugal, to consider the state of the European economy. While there had been economic growth in Europe in the 1990s, it had been consistently lower than that of the European Union's (“EU” or “Union”) main competitors, with unemployment levels remaining stubbornly high. Determined to blaze a new course in Europe, Heads of State and Government announced that “the Union has [today] set itself a new strategic goal for the next decade: to become the most competitive and dynamic knowledge-based economy in the world, capable of sustainable growth with more and better jobs …


The Egyptian Pharmaceutical Industry After Trips — A Practitioner's View, Nermien Al-Ali Jan 2002

The Egyptian Pharmaceutical Industry After Trips — A Practitioner's View, Nermien Al-Ali

Fordham International Law Journal

The pharmaceutical industry in Egypt is the largest in the Middle East and North Africa (“MENA”) region, and one that has attracted foreign investment despite the fact that Egyptian law has not always provided pharmaceuticals with patent protection. The situation changed with the signing of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (“TRIPS agreement” or “TRIPS”), strengthening the interest of the U.S. and other pharmaceutical companies in increasing their investment in Egypt. The Egyptian pharmaceutical industry is currently undergoing many changes spurred by the implementation of TRIPS and the globalization of trade. Many of these changes can be …


The Territoriality Principle Of Patent Protection And Conflict Of Laws: A Review Of Japanese Court Decisions, Teruo Doi Jan 2002

The Territoriality Principle Of Patent Protection And Conflict Of Laws: A Review Of Japanese Court Decisions, Teruo Doi

Fordham International Law Journal

Among the various categories of intellectual property, the territoriality principle is applied most strictly to patent protection of inventions and copyright protection of works of authorship. The basic international standards for patent and copyright protections are set forth, respectively, in the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property and the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. As of April 15, 2002, 163 States are members of the Paris Union and 149 States are members of the Berne Union. Japan acceded to the Paris and Berne Conventions in 1899. A patent granted in one country has …


The Qualifying Industrial Zone Initiative - A New Tool To Provide Economic Assistance To Middle Eastern Countries Engaged In The Peace Process, Joel Singer Jan 2002

The Qualifying Industrial Zone Initiative - A New Tool To Provide Economic Assistance To Middle Eastern Countries Engaged In The Peace Process, Joel Singer

Fordham International Law Journal

This Article first examines the role of economic and developmental assistance in the context of peacemaking and then focuses on one specific innovative economic assistance measure: the Qualifying Industrial Zone (“QIZ”) initiative. Part I of this Article describes how addressing the economic requirements of the negotiating parties has interplayed with their other requirements within the overall framework of peacemaking. Specifically, based on the experience gained over the last thirty years of the Middle East peace process, this Part describes the overarching requirements that the parties have pursued through peace negotiations. As explained below, former Middle East warriors have always attempted …