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Articles 1 - 6 of 6
Full-Text Articles in Law
Introduction: Transatlantic Perspectives On Law, Security And Power: A German/American Dialogue On Nato’S 60th Anniversary
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
Transatlantic Perspectives on Law, Security and Power: A German/American Dialogue on NATO’s 60th Anniversary, Symposium.
Nato At Sixty: American Between Law And War, Mary Ellen O'Connell
Nato At Sixty: American Between Law And War, Mary Ellen O'Connell
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
NATO was founded to counter the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Treaty Organization. Both have been gone for over twenty years. So why is NATO still here? Part of the explanation may lie in Americans' strong belief in the efficacy of military force. NATO remains associated in Americans' minds with the greatest time of U.S. military power. Yet, the United States also has a strong commitment to the rule of law. The country appears overdue for a return to this other commitment. We should not be surprised to soon see the United States promoting international law again-and that could mean …
Germany's Basic Law And The Use Of Force, Russell A. Miller
Germany's Basic Law And The Use Of Force, Russell A. Miller
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
The German Basic Law's Regime for the use of force is evidence of and an explanation for the deep difference between Germany and the United States on security matters. It also might say something more grand about the power of law to constrain force.
Transatlantic Perspectives on Law, Security and Power: A German/American Dialogue on NATO’s 60th Anniversary, Symposium.
Trading Debts Across Borders: A European Solution (Snyder Lecture), Richard Fentiman
Trading Debts Across Borders: A European Solution (Snyder Lecture), Richard Fentiman
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
On April 7, 2009, Richard Fentiman delivered the tenth annual Snyder Lecture at the Indiana University Maurer School of Law.
Two Concluding Remarks, European Union Countries, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, National Security, Elisabeth Zoller
Two Concluding Remarks, European Union Countries, North Atlantic Treaty Organization, National Security, Elisabeth Zoller
Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies
Professor Zoller offers several closing thoughts, focusing on the rationales for maintaining NATO in the twenty-first century and the theme of peace through law. She concludes that NATO is vital for European security, and that NATO is here to stay for both legal and factual reasons.
Transatlantic Perspectives on Law, Security and Power: A German/American Dialogue on NATO’s 60th Anniversary, Symposium.
Network Neutrality Between False Positives And False Negatives: Introducing A European Approach To American Broadband Markets, Jasper P. Sluijs
Network Neutrality Between False Positives And False Negatives: Introducing A European Approach To American Broadband Markets, Jasper P. Sluijs
Federal Communications Law Journal
Network neutrality has become a contentious issue both in Europe and the United States. Regulators on both sides of the Atlantic face digital divides in their society, and are confronted with potentially conflicting policy goals-to incentivize private investment in next-generation broadband while maintaining "neutral" and competitive broadband networks.
This Article compares nascent American and European network neutrality policy in terms of regulatory error costs. Emerging markets, such as broadband, are more likely to be affected by regulatory errors, and these errors have graver consequences in emerging markets than in regular markets. U.S. telecommunications policy traditionally has advanced a trial-and-error approach …