A quarter century ago, the prospects for federal civil litigation of international human rights violations under the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) seemed bright. With the statute’s modern revival, a decade earlier in Filártiga, foreign nationals, often with no recourse in their own countries, had a forum for judicial vindication of a broad range of wrongs by state officials, multinational corporations, and even, in limited circumstances, foreign states themselves. The Supreme Court’s Kiobel decision in 2013, however, may signal the end of the Filártiga revolution, with Congress’s seeming acquiescence: Congress, after all, could amend the ATS if it disagreed with the Court. Congress’s inaction should not be attributed to inertia, for Congress ha...
For over four decades, the Alien Tort Statute has served as a central battleground in some of the co...
I argue in this article that no reasonable basis exists to justify federal courts refusing to consid...
Judge Kaufman held in a 1980 decision that a non-US citizen could file civil suits in the U.S. for h...
A quarter century ago, the prospects for federal civil litigation of international human rights viol...
Human rights’ and other international law activists have long worked to add teeth to their tasks. O...
The Alien Tort Statute, enacted in 1789 as part of the first Judiciary Act, provides that “[t]he dis...
This Article - part of a symposium on civil litigation and terrorism - focuses on the potential of t...
The Alien Tort Statute (ATS), enacted in 1789 as part of the first Judiciary Act, provides that “[t]...
For decades, the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) has played a valuable role in human rights litigation in U...
Since the April 2013 Supreme Court decision of Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, the future of intern...
U.S. foreign policy--under every Administration--involves promoting respect for human rights around ...
Advancing a bold theory of the relevance of tort law in the fight against human rights abuses, celeb...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
In the past thirty-five years, international human rights lawyers and, more recently, international ...
This Article begins from the premise that the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) no longer serves a useful pur...
For over four decades, the Alien Tort Statute has served as a central battleground in some of the co...
I argue in this article that no reasonable basis exists to justify federal courts refusing to consid...
Judge Kaufman held in a 1980 decision that a non-US citizen could file civil suits in the U.S. for h...
A quarter century ago, the prospects for federal civil litigation of international human rights viol...
Human rights’ and other international law activists have long worked to add teeth to their tasks. O...
The Alien Tort Statute, enacted in 1789 as part of the first Judiciary Act, provides that “[t]he dis...
This Article - part of a symposium on civil litigation and terrorism - focuses on the potential of t...
The Alien Tort Statute (ATS), enacted in 1789 as part of the first Judiciary Act, provides that “[t]...
For decades, the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) has played a valuable role in human rights litigation in U...
Since the April 2013 Supreme Court decision of Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum, the future of intern...
U.S. foreign policy--under every Administration--involves promoting respect for human rights around ...
Advancing a bold theory of the relevance of tort law in the fight against human rights abuses, celeb...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
In the past thirty-five years, international human rights lawyers and, more recently, international ...
This Article begins from the premise that the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) no longer serves a useful pur...
For over four decades, the Alien Tort Statute has served as a central battleground in some of the co...
I argue in this article that no reasonable basis exists to justify federal courts refusing to consid...
Judge Kaufman held in a 1980 decision that a non-US citizen could file civil suits in the U.S. for h...