BETWEEN A ROCK AND A HARD PLACE?* ICT COMPANIES, ARMED CONFLICT, AND INTERNATIONAL LAW

What is an information, communication and technology (“ICT”) company to do when operating in the midst of an international armed conflict like the one raging in Ukraine? How should tech company executives respond to urgent government demands—often conflicting—to propagate or censor online content arising in the context of war, including disinformation? And what of their Read More …

AGREEING TO DISAGREE: THE PROBLEMS OF THE TRADITIONAL APPROACHES TO THE INTERPRETATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW

People disagree about international law. To help them work through these disagreements, the discipline has developed a series of rules on the interpretation of its various sources—most notably, Articles 31 and 32 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties and the standards developed by the International Court of Justice and the International Law Read More …

A DECADE OF IMPUNITY: FINDING JUSTICE FOR THE YAZIDI WOMEN VICTIMS OF THE ISLAMIC STATE

Kocho, a town at the foot of Sinjar Mountain in Iraq, was among the Yazidi towns targeted and attacked by the Islamic State (IS)1 in August 2014.2 IS invaded Kocho, murdered the men, and then transported the younger women to a wedding hall before eventually taking them to a makeshift prison facility where they were Read More …

J. JACKSON, THE WORLD TRADING SYSTEM: LAW AND POLICY OF INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC RELATIONS

The book first sets forth the policies and practical considerations underlying the current international and national trading regimes, including a description of what Professor Jackson calls the “constitutional structure” of the national and world trading systems. In addition, the book describes the procedures and practices of dispute resolution. The international focus of the book is Read More …

INTERNATIONAL JUDICIAL ASSISTANCE: DOES 28 U.S.C. X1782 CONTAIN AN IMPLICIT DISCOVERABILITY REQUIREMENT

This Note argues that the Second Circuit’s interpretation of Section 1782 should become the standard throughout the federal courts because it applies proper canons of statutory interpretation, adheres to the U.S. Congress’ intent to provide an efficient means of assistance to participants in non-U.S. tribunals, and encourages other nations to provide similarly broad discovery requests Read More …

INTERNATIONAL HARMONIZATION OF PATENT LAW: A PROPOSED SOLUTION TO THE UNITED STATES’ FIRST-TO-FILE DEBATE

As trade barriers diminish and global economies continue to expand, harmonization and enforcement of international patent protection becomes increasingly important. This note compares the U.S. system with other countries. It argues that the U.S. should harmonize with the rest of the world. Part I discusses the different systems for determining priority of invention and the Read More …

INSIDER TRADING: THE LAWS OF EUROPE, THE UNITED STATES AND JAPAN

Professor Emmanuel Gaillard’s recent compilation of foreign and domestic insider trading chapters in his book, Insider Trading: The Laws of Europe, the United States and Japan, provides a tremendous service for both international lawyers and United States securities practitioners. The book is a handy reference guide, as its title suggests, to recent statutory provisions passed Read More …

HORACIO A. GRIGERA NA´ON, CHOICE-OF-LAW PROBLEMS IN INTERNATIONAL COMMERCIAL REGULATION

In Professor Grigera Naon’s latest work, Choice-of-law Problems in International Commercial Arbitration, he attempts to “analyze diverse aspects of international commercial arbitration so as to determine to what extent arbitral tribunals are willing to perform the independent role ascribed to them by lex mercatoria theoreticians, namely, the creation of an autonomous, anational and all-prevailing international Read More …

HIGHLIGHTS OF THE U.S. IMMIGRATION ACT OF 1990

The Act is a comprehensive package that institutes a substantial number of new provisions to the Immigration and Nationality Act, with significant modifications made to such divergent topics as family immigration, business immigration, naturalization, and exclusion and deportation grounds and procedures. This Article surveys the changes and highlights those most likely to have a substantial Read More …

HEDGING EUROPEAN INTEGRATION: THE MAASTRICHT JUDGMENT OF THE FEDERAL CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF GERMANY

This Essay will report, analyze, and criticize the eighty-five page opinion of the Constitutional Court. Notwithstanding any criticism, the judgment is certain to have an impact on the European Union as it emerges from the Maastricht Treaty. The concluding section will assess that impact. By way of introduction, the following section will give a survey Read More …