The United States and the other countries of the world will continue to develop rules and laws governing their relationships in international commercial matters as the years ensue. As part of that agenda, lawyers and members of the international trading community should be familiar with the dispute resolution provisions of the United States Court of International Trade and some of the procedural and substantive problems of the Court. The Court\u27s function is to judicially review disputes under the customs and trade laws of the United States
The authors examine how new technologies and the globalization of world trade affect national judici...
The International Court of Justice ( ICJ or Court ) is the successor to both the Permanent Court o...
When one of the parties is foreign in civil personal jurisdiction cases, United States courts have a...
The United States and the other countries of the world will continue to develop rules and laws gover...
The scope of this article extends solely to reviewing the pressing question of proper jurisdiction a...
The central focus of the conference was the dispute settlement system of the World Trade Organizatio...
The author delivered these remarks on March 20, 1998 at Golden Gate University School of Law at the ...
This article discusses the specific problems involved in Customs Court jurisdiction. After outlining...
In 1980 Congress enacted the Customs Courts Act of 1980, a law designed to improve the Federal judi...
This Article will consider the following: Part I will discuss some general issues concerning dispute...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Part I of this article identifies and analyzes some modern trends in judicial review in the area of ...
The limits of international trade must be understood within the context of the institutional framewo...
This Article will present come impressions of the effect on the U.S. International Trade Commission ...
Increases in the amount and complexity of international trade and changes in jurisdictional rules ov...
The authors examine how new technologies and the globalization of world trade affect national judici...
The International Court of Justice ( ICJ or Court ) is the successor to both the Permanent Court o...
When one of the parties is foreign in civil personal jurisdiction cases, United States courts have a...
The United States and the other countries of the world will continue to develop rules and laws gover...
The scope of this article extends solely to reviewing the pressing question of proper jurisdiction a...
The central focus of the conference was the dispute settlement system of the World Trade Organizatio...
The author delivered these remarks on March 20, 1998 at Golden Gate University School of Law at the ...
This article discusses the specific problems involved in Customs Court jurisdiction. After outlining...
In 1980 Congress enacted the Customs Courts Act of 1980, a law designed to improve the Federal judi...
This Article will consider the following: Part I will discuss some general issues concerning dispute...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Part I of this article identifies and analyzes some modern trends in judicial review in the area of ...
The limits of international trade must be understood within the context of the institutional framewo...
This Article will present come impressions of the effect on the U.S. International Trade Commission ...
Increases in the amount and complexity of international trade and changes in jurisdictional rules ov...
The authors examine how new technologies and the globalization of world trade affect national judici...
The International Court of Justice ( ICJ or Court ) is the successor to both the Permanent Court o...
When one of the parties is foreign in civil personal jurisdiction cases, United States courts have a...