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Vanderbilt University Law School

Due process

1953

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Conflict Of Laws: The Experience Of The Australian Federation, Zelman Cowen Apr 1953

The Conflict Of Laws: The Experience Of The Australian Federation, Zelman Cowen

Vanderbilt Law Review

For American lawyers conflict of laws problems arise at two levels. One group of problems appears within the area governed by the Federal Constitution, while others arise within a wider international area. The decision of a New York forum in a case involving Michigan elements may very well differ from that reached by the same forum where the foreign elements involve England or France. The Constitution itself is often responsible for this difference. For example, questions of full faith and credit or of due process may be involved. It is not surprising, therefore, that the question has been posed whether …


"Military Due Process": What Is It?, Seymour W. Wurfel Feb 1953

"Military Due Process": What Is It?, Seymour W. Wurfel

Vanderbilt Law Review

On November 27, 1951, the United States Court of Military Appeals, then some five months old, fashioned in the Clay case' what is characterized as a label. It embellished this label with quotation marks at least twice in the course of the opinion. This label, which was, in the language of the Court, used "for lack of a more descriptive phrase,"was "military due process." This, and later use of the term by the Court in other opinions, has caused some students of military law to speculate as to whether there is occurring the emergence of a new doctrine of law. …