Lenahan (Gonzales) v. United States of America: Defining Due Diligence?
The United Nations reports that the most common form of violence experienced by women around the world is physical violence inflicted by an intimate partner. On a global average, at least one in three...
View ArticleThe Enforcement of Foreign Copyright Judgments in U.S. Courts and the First...
“This Note aims to use the Viewfinder decision as a starting point to consider more broadly the enforcement of foreign copyright judgments. It will caution against the temptation to summarily refuse...
View ArticleThe Success of, and Response to, India’s Law against Patent Layering
This note examines India’s unique law against patent layering, and holds it up as a successful model for countries that wish to restrict the practice in a legal environment that makes it increasingly...
View ArticleA Shifting Tide in the South China Sea: The Permanent Court of Arbitration...
By Christopher Mirasola October was not a good month for China in the South China Sea. The United States Navy sent a guided missile destroyer on a freedom of navigation exercise to assert that...
View ArticleCould Collective Action Clauses have saved Argentina’s Presidential Plane?
By Josh Macfarlane Tango 01—Argentina’s equivalent to Air Force One—hasn’t gotten much air time recently. The plane was grounded in 2013 by the country’s former President Cristina Kirchner, who was...
View ArticleRegulating Economic Development: Environmental and Social Standards of the...
By Jisan Kim This year, the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) will officially initiate its operations with $100 billion of capital. The AIIB aims to fund much-needed basic infrastructure...
View Article
More Pages to Explore .....