The Helms-Burton Act\u27s validity must be tested not only against principles of international law and the obligations of international trading agreements, but the statute\u27s use of the federal judiciary. Although the Act may be consistent with jurisdictional principles and agreements such as GATT and NAFTA, it may force federal courts into a role ill-suited for U.S. national security policy and inconsistent with basic constitutional principles. Professor Yoo argues that whether Helms-Burton violates international law is insignificant to domestic enforcement of Congressional foreign policy objectives. Further, the national security exceptions to GATT and NAFTA provide sufficient latitude to permit the Act\u27s enforcement. The most troubl...
The United States\u27 tool of choice to further its foreign policy goals appears to be economic sanc...
This Note gives the legal background of the doctrine of dormant foreign affairs preemption, examines...
The Helms-Burton law has attracted the attention of international law scholars, political scientists...
The Helms-Burton Act\u27s validity must be tested not only against principles of international law a...
This essay argues that Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council may not portend a more aggressive in...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...
State and local governments across the United States increasingly act in areas that intersect with f...
For much of this century, American foreign affairs law has assumed that there is a sharp distinction...
The doctrines requiring judicial deference to executive interpretations of laws affecting foreign af...
Few substantive areas have merited as little empirical scrutiny as the Supreme Court's decision...
In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always....
There are many myths about the role of courts in foreign affairs and national security in Western de...
The proposed Hague Convention provides the United States with a guarantee that U.S. judgments in com...
How should courts handle cases that implicate foreign relations or national security? What weight sh...
While Article VI of the US Constitution establishes treaties as supreme federal law, scholars and la...
The United States\u27 tool of choice to further its foreign policy goals appears to be economic sanc...
This Note gives the legal background of the doctrine of dormant foreign affairs preemption, examines...
The Helms-Burton law has attracted the attention of international law scholars, political scientists...
The Helms-Burton Act\u27s validity must be tested not only against principles of international law a...
This essay argues that Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council may not portend a more aggressive in...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...
State and local governments across the United States increasingly act in areas that intersect with f...
For much of this century, American foreign affairs law has assumed that there is a sharp distinction...
The doctrines requiring judicial deference to executive interpretations of laws affecting foreign af...
Few substantive areas have merited as little empirical scrutiny as the Supreme Court's decision...
In the US constitutional system, the president generally conducts foreign relations. But not always....
There are many myths about the role of courts in foreign affairs and national security in Western de...
The proposed Hague Convention provides the United States with a guarantee that U.S. judgments in com...
How should courts handle cases that implicate foreign relations or national security? What weight sh...
While Article VI of the US Constitution establishes treaties as supreme federal law, scholars and la...
The United States\u27 tool of choice to further its foreign policy goals appears to be economic sanc...
This Note gives the legal background of the doctrine of dormant foreign affairs preemption, examines...
The Helms-Burton law has attracted the attention of international law scholars, political scientists...