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Articles 6691 - 6720 of 6918
Full-Text Articles in Law
A Role For Governments In The Resolution Of International Private Commercial Disputes, Ginger Lew, Jean Heilman Grier
A Role For Governments In The Resolution Of International Private Commercial Disputes, Ginger Lew, Jean Heilman Grier
Fordham International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
International Human Rights Law In The Twenty-First Century: Effective Municipal Implementation Or Paean To Platitudes, Neil H. Afran
International Human Rights Law In The Twenty-First Century: Effective Municipal Implementation Or Paean To Platitudes, Neil H. Afran
Fordham International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Will The European Union Packaging Directive Reconcile Trade And The Environment?, Alexandra Haner
Will The European Union Packaging Directive Reconcile Trade And The Environment?, Alexandra Haner
Fordham International Law Journal
No abstract provided.
Vietnam: Potential Market And New Opportunities, Ngo Quang Xuan
Vietnam: Potential Market And New Opportunities, Ngo Quang Xuan
Fordham International Law Journal
During the past five years, Vietnam has achieved the best economic development in its independent history. Vietnam is also experiencing increased levels of foreign investment and export trade. Normalization of relations between the United States and Vietnam will create more favorable conditions for trade and investment between the two countries. In 1991, the Government of Vietnam approved the Strategy for Socio-Economic Stabilization and Development Until the Year 2000 ("Strategy"). The basic concept of the Strategy is to place human beings at the center of development and to promote the potentials of individuals, communities, and the whole nation. The strategy also …
China's Intellectual Property Protection: Prospects For Achieving International Standards, Derek Dessler
China's Intellectual Property Protection: Prospects For Achieving International Standards, Derek Dessler
Fordham International Law Journal
This Comment presents the intellectual property protection laws of China and examines whether these laws, when combined with the 1995 Accord, will lead to improved intellectual property protection in China. Part I discusses the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs), and the established standards for intellectual property rights protection. Part I also examines China's intellectual property laws and regulations. Part II analyzes the impediments to effective intellectual property rights enforcement in China. Part III argues that China's intellectual property rights laws fail to meet the international intellectual property rights standard embodied …
Transformations Of Law And Place: Introduction To The Articles By Buchanan, Darian-Smith, Maurer, And Aman, David M. Engel
Transformations Of Law And Place: Introduction To The Articles By Buchanan, Darian-Smith, Maurer, And Aman, David M. Engel
Journal Articles
No abstract provided.
Why Redraw The Map Of Africa: A Legal And Moral Inquiry, Makau Wa Mutua
Why Redraw The Map Of Africa: A Legal And Moral Inquiry, Makau Wa Mutua
Journal Articles
This article questions the legitimacy of the African state and the imperial cartography on which it is based. It argues that African states are conceptually faulty because they are the crude and thoughtless handiworks of European colonial powers. It is the artificiality of the African state that has been responsible for its failure to cohere into a nation that is viable. The piece argues for geographic and normative re-articulation of the African state - by smashing the current states - to endow them with moral, political, and legal legitimacy. It concludes that democratic entities are unlikely to develop where pre-colonial …
New Challenges To Southern Africa: From Regional Conflict To Internal Reconstruction, Makau Wa Mutua
New Challenges To Southern Africa: From Regional Conflict To Internal Reconstruction, Makau Wa Mutua
Journal Articles
With the possible exception of the Horn of Africa, arguably no other African region has been subject to multiple traumas such as those endured by Southern Africa. From the brutal Portuguese colonization to the vicious civil wars in Angola and Mozambique, not to mention the ravages of apartheid in South Africa and Namibia, the last four hundred years have seen sheer brutality of man over fellow man. Since 1990, however, there has been a steady reversal of the conditions that have historically caused violence in the region. In this article, the author examines this legacy and the struggle to construct …
Children's Task Force Reports, Donald N. Duquette, Cd Stephens
Children's Task Force Reports, Donald N. Duquette, Cd Stephens
Articles
When the public thinks of children and the law, high-visibility cases like Baby Jessica and Baby Richard come to mind. The human drama of a small child caught up in a titanic custody struggle attracts unrelenting media attention and triggers cries for law reform. Yet for every Baby Jessica and Baby Richard, thousands of children pass through our courts with little public attention but with consequences to them just as momentous and life altering as those cases featured on the national news shows. In 1991 State Bar of Michigan leadership began to ask whether our profession and Michigan's courts are …
John J. Regan, Ronald H. Silverman
The Natural Law Tradition On The Modern Supreme Court: Not Burke, But The Enlightenment Tradition Represented By Locke, Madison, And Marshall., R. Randall Kelso
The Natural Law Tradition On The Modern Supreme Court: Not Burke, But The Enlightenment Tradition Represented By Locke, Madison, And Marshall., R. Randall Kelso
St. Mary's Law Journal
A traditional common-law style of judicial decisionmaking exists which was present at this nation’s founding. This common law style is derived from natural law tradition. And this tradition stands as an alternative to the formalism of Justice Scalia or the Holmesian style of Chief Justice Rehnquist. This natural law style, with its focus on the religious and communitarian ethical tradition, was the dominant view of judicial interpretation for the framing and ratifying generation of the original Constitution and the Civil War Amendments. The decisionmaking style of Justices O’Connor, Kennedy, and Souter appears to have great affinity with this traditional common-law …
In Re Oluloro: Risk Of Female Genital Mutilation As Extreme Hardship In Immigration Proceedings Symposium - Human Rights In The Americas - Recent Development., Patricia Dysart Rudloff
In Re Oluloro: Risk Of Female Genital Mutilation As Extreme Hardship In Immigration Proceedings Symposium - Human Rights In The Americas - Recent Development., Patricia Dysart Rudloff
St. Mary's Law Journal
On March 23, 1994, in In re Oluloro, Immigration Judge Kendall Warren’s decision indicated the United States Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) should consider human rights abuses directed at women. The overriding concern was the possibility that two young U.S. girls would suffer female genital mutilation (FGM) if the INS deported their mother to Nigeria. In reaching the decision to suspend the mother’s deportation, Judge Warren condemned FGM as “cruel and serv[ing] no known medical purpose.” Judge Warren ruled the practice presented an extreme hardship for the girls. Unfortunately, the court’s ruling has no precedential value because the INS did …
Use Of A Pen Register May Be A Search Within The Purview Of Article I, Section 9 Of The Texas Constitution., Angie Patrick
Use Of A Pen Register May Be A Search Within The Purview Of Article I, Section 9 Of The Texas Constitution., Angie Patrick
St. Mary's Law Journal
In Richardson v. State, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals granted Richardson’s second petition for discretionary review to determine whether law enforcement’s use of a pen register constitutes a search. The use of a pen register may be a search within the purview of Article I, Section 9 of the Texas Constitution. Courts use the reasonable-expectation-of-privacy test, from Katz v. United States, to determine whether a search has occurred under the Fourth Amendment. In Richardson, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals reviewed whether the use of a pen register equates to a search despite the U.S. Supreme Court’s determination in …
Oil And Gas Issues Involved In Cercla Reauthorization., Joseph R. Dancy, Victoria A. Dancy
Oil And Gas Issues Involved In Cercla Reauthorization., Joseph R. Dancy, Victoria A. Dancy
St. Mary's Law Journal
After several decades of environmental legislation, the regulated community faces an extremely complex and costly matrix of obligations and responsibilities. For industry in general, the most expensive environmental statute enacted has been the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act of 1980 (CERCLA). CERCLA created the Hazardous Substances Superfund (Superfund) and established retroactive liability for remediation of hazardous substance contamination. President Clinton admitted CERCLA does not work and even labelled the Superfund a “disaster.” Even though public and private entities have already spent twenty billion dollars on the CERCLA program since its inception, only around ten or twenty percent of …
Trade And Wages: Choosing Among Alternative Explanations, Jagdish N. Bhagwati
Trade And Wages: Choosing Among Alternative Explanations, Jagdish N. Bhagwati
Faculty Scholarship
The decline in unskilled workers’ real wages during the 1980s in the United States and the increase in their unemployment in Europe (due to the comparative inflexibility of European labor markets vis-à-vis those in the United States) have prompted a search for possible explanations. This search has become more acute with the evidence that the adverse trend for the unskilled has not been mitigated during the 1990s to date.
A favored explanation, indeed the haunting fear, of the unions and of many policymakers is that international trade is a principal source of the pressures that translate into wage decline and/or …
Quo Vadis: The Status And Prospects Of Tests Under The Religion Clauses, Kent Greenawalt
Quo Vadis: The Status And Prospects Of Tests Under The Religion Clauses, Kent Greenawalt
Faculty Scholarship
As the 1994 term drew to a close, "tests" for the Religion Clauses were in nearly total disarray. Apart from cases of discrimination against religions, and disputes over church property, a student of the Supreme Court's jurisprudence could not formulate any general tests that a majority of the Justices clearly support. As exciting as this state of affairs is for those who welcome uncertainty and change, it is disquieting for lawyers and clients, for judges who must decide free exercise and establishment claims, and for Supreme Court Justices who aspire to stable principles of adjudication. In this essay, I provide …
Takings Law And The Regulatory State: A Response To R.S. Radford, William Michael Treanor
Takings Law And The Regulatory State: A Response To R.S. Radford, William Michael Treanor
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
In the Winter 1994 issue of the Fordham Urban Law Journal, R.S. Radford provided an illuminating review of Dennis Coyle's book Property Rights and the Constitution. Radford observes that, in addition to studying post-New Deal land use cases, Coyle "provides an ideological framework that illuminates several key strands in the constitutional jurisprudence of property law ... [and] sets forth his own theories of the vital role of private property in creating and maintaining the American constitutional system." Radford's review is a generally enthusiastic one. He sees Coyle's book as providing a much-needed corrective to "the existing pro-regulatory bias …
Environmental Justice Clinics: Visible Models Of Justice, Hope M. Babcock
Environmental Justice Clinics: Visible Models Of Justice, Hope M. Babcock
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
This article examines and evaluates the contributions of environmental justice law clinics to pedagogy, law reform and legal services. The author bases her observations and conclusions on her experiences at Georgetown University Law Center where she teaches a course in environmental equity and supervises students in an environmental justice clinic.
Part II summarizes current knowledge about the incidences and causes of environmental inequity and the legal barriers to achieving environmental justice. This discussion highlights the distinctive aspects of environmental justice issues which influence the design of environmental justice clinical programs. Part III presents general information on legal clinical programs and …
"Coming Out": The Practical Battles From Being Visible As A Lesbian, Barbara Cox
"Coming Out": The Practical Battles From Being Visible As A Lesbian, Barbara Cox
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Differences In Judging Styles Of Law-Students And The Effect On Sentencing, Beverly Annette Hamby
Differences In Judging Styles Of Law-Students And The Effect On Sentencing, Beverly Annette Hamby
Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects
No abstract provided.
Health Policy Below The Waterline: Medical Care And The Charitable Exemption, Maxwell Gregg Bloche
Health Policy Below The Waterline: Medical Care And The Charitable Exemption, Maxwell Gregg Bloche
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
For almost one hundred years, America's nonprofit hospitals have enjoyed nearly automatic exemption from federal income taxation. During this time, nonprofit hospitals transformed themselves from resting places of last resort for the sick poor into centers of high-technology intervention for all income groups. The financing of their services evolved in parallel, from primary dependence on the generosity of religious orders and charitable donors, to almost exclusive reliance on payments for services rendered. Meanwhile, the exemption's doctrinal underpinnings were repeatedly reinvented to accommodate change in the hospital industry's financial structure and social role. When Congress first enacted a charitable exemption to …
Health Information Privacy, Lawrence O. Gostin
Health Information Privacy, Lawrence O. Gostin
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
Thoughtful scholarship in the area of informational privacy sometimes assumes that a significant level of privacy can coexist with the development of a modern health information infrastructure. Some commentators suggest that we can have it both ways: that adequate legal protection of informational privacy will eliminate the need to significantly limit the collection of health data. This article demonstrates that there is no such easy resolution of the conflict between the need for information and the need for privacy. Because significant levels of privacy cannot realistically be achieved within the health information infrastructure currently envisaged by policymakers, we confront a …
Reverse Engineering And The Rise Of Electronic Vigilantism: Intellectual Property Implications Of "Lock-Out" Programs, Julie E. Cohen
Reverse Engineering And The Rise Of Electronic Vigilantism: Intellectual Property Implications Of "Lock-Out" Programs, Julie E. Cohen
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
Over the past few years, there has been an abundance of scholarship dealing with the appropriate scope of copyright and patent protection for computer programs. This Article approaches those problems from a slightly different perspective, focusing on the discrete problem of lock-out programs. The choice of lock-out as a paradigm for exploring the interoperability question and the contours of copyright and patent protection of computer programs is informed by two considerations. First, for purposes of the interoperability inquiry, lock-out programs represent an extreme; they are discrete, self-contained modules that are highly innovative in design, yet that serve no purpose other …
The Developing Role Of Non-Governmental Organizations In Global Policy And Law Making, Charlotte Ku
The Developing Role Of Non-Governmental Organizations In Global Policy And Law Making, Charlotte Ku
Faculty Scholarship
The history of international relations in the twentieth century may appear principally to be the story of the state.
At the same time, the history of international relations in the twentieth century is also one of international organizations as a means to support and strengthen the state's ability to discharge its primary functions of promoting order in the international system and ensuring the security of its own citizens.
An even more aggressive approach to meeting the needs of states is through aid programs like the UN Development Program.
These international organizations were created by governments, usually by treaty, to address …
Linguistic Indeterminacy And The Rule Of Law: On The Perils Of Misunderstanding Wittgenstein, Christian Zapf, Eben Moglen
Linguistic Indeterminacy And The Rule Of Law: On The Perils Of Misunderstanding Wittgenstein, Christian Zapf, Eben Moglen
Faculty Scholarship
The central article of faith of the traditional understanding of the Rule of Law is that precedent uniquely determines the outcome of legal cases. Skepticism about that faith, however, is widespread. Critical Legal Scholars, as well as their intellectual ancestors, the Legal Realists, have frequently attacked the legitimacy of the received model and the formalist view of the relationship between the law and its individual applications that underlies the model. The common aim of these attacks is to demonstrate that the law is indeterminate in outcome and that the supposed constraints of the Rule of Law on judges are fictions.
Social Justice And The Myth Of Fairness: A Communal Defense Of Affirmative Action, Phillip J. Closius
Social Justice And The Myth Of Fairness: A Communal Defense Of Affirmative Action, Phillip J. Closius
All Faculty Scholarship
This Article shall examine the characteristics of the current analytical framework by first examining some harmful effects resulting from the prioritization of fairness: excessive generalization, formalism and superficiality, and materialism. The Article will then examine in detail the Supreme Court's resolution of modern affirmative action issues. The Court has generated confusion and discord by applying simplistic concepts to complex problems and by adhering to the primacy of fairness in a context in which all interested parties claim that fairness favors their result. Finally, this Article will critique the Court's inability to provide a consistent doctrinal basis for discussing affirmative action …
Proportionality In Non-Capital Sentencing: The Supreme Court's Tortured Approach To Cruel And Unusual Punishment, Steven P. Grossman
Proportionality In Non-Capital Sentencing: The Supreme Court's Tortured Approach To Cruel And Unusual Punishment, Steven P. Grossman
All Faculty Scholarship
This Article examines the Supreme Court's treatment of the Eighth Amendment with respect to claims of excessive prison sentences. Specifically, it addresses the issue of whether and to what degree the Eighth Amendment requires that a punishment not be disproportionate to the crime. In analyzing all of the modern holdings of the Court in this area, this Article finds significant fault with each. The result of this series of flawed opinions from the Supreme Court is that the state of the law with respect to proportionality in sentencing is confused, and what law can be discerned rests on weak foundations. …
The Virtual Clerk's Office: A Proposed Model Judgement Lien Act For The Computer Age, Charles Shafer
The Virtual Clerk's Office: A Proposed Model Judgement Lien Act For The Computer Age, Charles Shafer
All Faculty Scholarship
This article addresses one aspect of the law regarding the satisfaction of judgments: when a creditor is determined to have a lien on property of the debtor. The unnecessary cumbersomeness of the present system, which limits the ability of creditors to promptly obtain a legally cognizable interest in specific property, hampers creditors in preventing the debtor's use, sale, or hypothecation of property that could be used to satisfy their debts. This is particularly true of intangible property and property where federal law or the law of sister states controls transfers. Not only do judgment creditors face the risk that the …
Color-Coded Standing, Girardeau A. Spann
Color-Coded Standing, Girardeau A. Spann
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
Remarkably, the Supreme Court has held that whites who wish to challenge the constitutionality of affirmative action plans have standing to do so. In Northeastern Florida Chapter of the Associated General Contractors v. City of Jacksonville the Supreme Court upheld the standing of non-minority construction contractors to challenge a minority setaside program under the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution. What is remarkable is not that the result reached in the case was wrong, but that the Court was able to reach that result given its most recent standing precedents. In previous Terms, the Supreme Court had taken …
Guns, Militias And Oklahoma City, Randy E. Barnett
Guns, Militias And Oklahoma City, Randy E. Barnett
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
While this Symposium on "The Second Amendment and the Right to Keep and Bear Arms" was in final stages of production a massive explosion ripped through a federal office building in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, killing scores of men, women, and children. As this Foreword is being written the final count of casualties is still unknown. Also unknown at this time are the identities of all who were involved in planning and executing this crime. One man is in custody, but to this point he has chosen to remain silent. Another unknown suspect is still at large.'