Near the end of the 2009 Term the Supreme Court decided Morrison v. Australia National Bank, Ltd., the strongest anti-extraterritoriality opinion it has produced in modern times. Not only is Congress presumed generally to prefer only territorial regulation, but lower courts that had carved out exceptions from this principle over a long period of time must now revisit their positions. Again this year in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Shell Co. the Court relied on an aggressive use of the presumption against extraterritoriality to cut back on an important field of private litigation. The Court appears to have embraced two related stances: The imposition of barriers to extraterritorial regulation generally advances welfare, and the lower courts cannot ...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Few subjects in international law raise such incorrigible conflicts of interest as the exercise of e...
Near the end of the 2009 Term the Supreme Court decided Morrison v. Australia National Bank, Ltd., t...
This Article addresses an underexplored but critical aspect of the presumption against extraterritor...
The extraterritorial application of national laws has become a battle ground over the last forty yea...
In the last few years, and mostly unnoticed, courts have adopted a radically different approach to i...
This Article contends that the current state of the debate over the balancing of interests in the ex...
In the last few years, the Supreme Court has applied the presumption against extraterritoriality to ...
The presumption against extraterritoriality tells courts to read a territorial limit into statutes t...
Recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court as to the international reach of American antitr...
The phenomenon of extraterritorial jurisdiction, or the exercise of legal power beyond territorial b...
Territoriality is a foundational principle of international order, and U.S. laws have always operate...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Few subjects in international law raise such incorrigible conflicts of interest as the exercise of e...
Near the end of the 2009 Term the Supreme Court decided Morrison v. Australia National Bank, Ltd., t...
This Article addresses an underexplored but critical aspect of the presumption against extraterritor...
The extraterritorial application of national laws has become a battle ground over the last forty yea...
In the last few years, and mostly unnoticed, courts have adopted a radically different approach to i...
This Article contends that the current state of the debate over the balancing of interests in the ex...
In the last few years, the Supreme Court has applied the presumption against extraterritoriality to ...
The presumption against extraterritoriality tells courts to read a territorial limit into statutes t...
Recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court as to the international reach of American antitr...
The phenomenon of extraterritorial jurisdiction, or the exercise of legal power beyond territorial b...
Territoriality is a foundational principle of international order, and U.S. laws have always operate...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Few subjects in international law raise such incorrigible conflicts of interest as the exercise of e...