This issue of the San Diego International Law Journal is filled with articles that truly exemplify the diversity of international law. Increasingly, United States courts are looking abroad for possible solutions to domestic legal problems. This issue provides a look into the successes and failures of legal structures from several different foreign nations, and provides a forum for discussion regarding the possible importation of these legal structures to the United States
This article provides just that sort of guide, outlining the various ways in which U.S. federal cour...
Conventional wisdom suggests that the transnational litigation system is essentially unipolar, or pe...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
The thirteenth volume of the San Diego International Law Journal is composed of articles illustratin...
The article contends that the Dodd-Frank Act and the case, Morrison v. National Australia Bank, rest...
With globalization and the proliferation of international commercial interaction, U.S. courts common...
As worldwide interest in international commercial courts grows, questions arise as to whether indivi...
In this Article, I review the development, expansion, and current state of extraterritorial enforcem...
The Eason-Weinmann Colloquium entitled The Internationalization of Law and Legal Practice, held in...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...
This article reviews developments in transnational legal practice during 2006 and 2007, including in...
When U.S. corporations cause harm abroad, should foreign plaintiffs be allowed to sue in the United ...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
This article provides just that sort of guide, outlining the various ways in which U.S. federal cour...
Conventional wisdom suggests that the transnational litigation system is essentially unipolar, or pe...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...
The thirteenth volume of the San Diego International Law Journal is composed of articles illustratin...
The article contends that the Dodd-Frank Act and the case, Morrison v. National Australia Bank, rest...
With globalization and the proliferation of international commercial interaction, U.S. courts common...
As worldwide interest in international commercial courts grows, questions arise as to whether indivi...
In this Article, I review the development, expansion, and current state of extraterritorial enforcem...
The Eason-Weinmann Colloquium entitled The Internationalization of Law and Legal Practice, held in...
The increasingly international reach of law owes part of its momentum to individual lawyers and law ...
This article reviews developments in transnational legal practice during 2006 and 2007, including in...
When U.S. corporations cause harm abroad, should foreign plaintiffs be allowed to sue in the United ...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
This article provides just that sort of guide, outlining the various ways in which U.S. federal cour...
Conventional wisdom suggests that the transnational litigation system is essentially unipolar, or pe...
Provides a critical approach to private international law in the context of global governance Explor...