There is no international bankruptcy law. No question, there are international insolvencies. Transnational firms, just like domestic ones, often cannot generate sufficient revenue to satisfy their debt obligations. Their financial distress creates a situation where assets and claimants are scattered across more than one country. But there is no international law that provides a set of rules for resolving the financial distress of these firms. The absence of any significant free-standing international bankruptcy treaty means that a domestic court confronted with the domestic part of a transnational enterprise has to decide which nation\u27s domestic bankruptcy law will apply to which assets. To the extent that one wants to talk about an int...
Although international business firms proliferate, there is no international bankruptcy system. Inst...
From Parmalat to Yukos, the pace of cross-border bankruptcy filings has been accelerating. Scholarly...
This paper explains why multinational companies should be concerned about adjudication of internatio...
There is no international bankruptcy law. No question, there are international insolvencies. Transna...
In recent years, there has been a rapid increase in transnational bankruptcy cases around the world....
Part I of this article sets forth the general problems associated with transnational bankruptcies. P...
The collapses of Yukos, Parmalat, and other international juggernauts have focused scholarly attenti...
That commerce has become international in scope is a fact known to all in the legal community. Many ...
While the European insolvency laws have been considered country-specific regulations, entirely focus...
This article discusses the difficult questions of conflict and cooperation among national bankruptcy...
This article explores the difficulties of coordinating cross-border bankruptcies. These difficulties...
Solutions to the problem of international bankruptcy are generally framed as either universalist (...
Transnational insolvency cases inherently involve questions of jurisdiction and conflicts of law. In...
The globalization of business activity is rightfully celebrated as one of the triumphs of the second...
SHOULD THERE BE a sovereign bankruptcy procedure for countries in financial distress? This paper exp...
Although international business firms proliferate, there is no international bankruptcy system. Inst...
From Parmalat to Yukos, the pace of cross-border bankruptcy filings has been accelerating. Scholarly...
This paper explains why multinational companies should be concerned about adjudication of internatio...
There is no international bankruptcy law. No question, there are international insolvencies. Transna...
In recent years, there has been a rapid increase in transnational bankruptcy cases around the world....
Part I of this article sets forth the general problems associated with transnational bankruptcies. P...
The collapses of Yukos, Parmalat, and other international juggernauts have focused scholarly attenti...
That commerce has become international in scope is a fact known to all in the legal community. Many ...
While the European insolvency laws have been considered country-specific regulations, entirely focus...
This article discusses the difficult questions of conflict and cooperation among national bankruptcy...
This article explores the difficulties of coordinating cross-border bankruptcies. These difficulties...
Solutions to the problem of international bankruptcy are generally framed as either universalist (...
Transnational insolvency cases inherently involve questions of jurisdiction and conflicts of law. In...
The globalization of business activity is rightfully celebrated as one of the triumphs of the second...
SHOULD THERE BE a sovereign bankruptcy procedure for countries in financial distress? This paper exp...
Although international business firms proliferate, there is no international bankruptcy system. Inst...
From Parmalat to Yukos, the pace of cross-border bankruptcy filings has been accelerating. Scholarly...
This paper explains why multinational companies should be concerned about adjudication of internatio...