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Databased of International Law Journal and Research Center
The International Law Journal and Research Center
International Law Journal and Research Center
During the 2017 summer transfer window, the football world was turned on its head when French powerhouse, Paris Saint-Germain (“PSG”), undertook a record-breaking spending spree.1 PSG purchased Neymar da Silva Santos Junior from Barcelona FC for approximately EU€221 million, breaking the previous record set by Manchester United’s EU€96 million purchase of Paul Pogba from Juventus Read More …
In 2019, the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan struck down the FGM Act, a 1996 statute which makes performing female genital mutilation a federal crime. The court held that the FGM Act was an unconstitutional overstep of Congress’ authority to regulate interstate commerce under the Commerce Clause, since FGM is Read More …
Looks at the arrest of Raymond Bayron Velez, Efran Morales Caban and Pedro Rosado and their relation to the Treaty between the United States of America and the United States Mexican States on the Execution of Penal Sentences (Treaty). David Vaida
The Rohingyas are widely considered to be the most persecuted people in the world. Though they have lived in what is now southwestern Myanmar for hundreds of years, the Burmese government denied the Rohingyas citizenship at the country’s independence from Britain. This statelessness, and the bigotry underlying it, has led to waves of violence, forced Read More …
The goal of any criminal enterprise, whether it’s human trafficking, drug dealing, or any other organized crime, is to generate a profit. However, after earning their illegal gains, criminals must introduce those funds into a legitimate financial system, lest they risk raising the suspicion of law enforcement officers or leaving a trail of incriminating evidence. Read More …
Traditionally, the United States has aspired to the operation of its industries in a system of free enterprise. One of the oldest instances of government intervention in shipping – the cabotage law- was designed to preserve for domestic vessels all trade between domestic points. Recently, however, developments in maritime commerce have led United States courts Read More …
This Note examines the interrelationship between the Convention and the FISA, specifically, whether a sovereign’s ratification of the Convention constitutes a waiver of immunity under section 1605(a)(1) of the FISA in actions to enforce arbitration agreements and awards. The development of sovereign immunity law in arbitration enforcement actions, pre-FISA and under the FISA’s “waiver” exception, Read More …
One of the goals routinely ascribed to international criminal law (“ICL”) prosecutions is the ability to improve the rule of law domestically in post-atrocity states. This Article reassesses the common assumption that the relationship between the pursuit of ICL accountability and improving the rule of law in post-atrocity states is necessarily a linear, wholly positive Read More …
The author starts with the premise that the U.S.-Soviet Maritime Agreement, which was signed on October 14, 1972, and renegotiated as of December 19, 1972, is unique. Before the agreement was signed, only about 6 percent of U.S.-Soviet trade was being carried in U.S. bottoms, whereas 94 percent was being carried in Soviet bottoms. The Read More …
The Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties sets the rules of treaty interpretation in articles 31-33. Yet these rules are quite vague, and they leave a lot of room for judicial discretion. The European Court of Human Rights (“ECHR” or “the Court”) has developed its own version of these rules of interpretation—a version that Read More …