This Article offers a coherent way of thinking about double jeopardy rules among sovereigns. Its theory has strong explanatory power for current double jeopardy law and practice in both U.S. federal and international legal systems, recommends adjustments to double jeopardy doctrine in both systems, and sharpens normative assessment of that doctrine. The Article develops a jurisdictional theory of double jeopardy under which sovereignty signifies independent jurisdiction to make and apply law. Using this theory, the Article recasts the history of the U.S. Supreme Court\u27s dual sovereignty doctrine entirely in terms of jurisdiction, penetrating the opacity of the term sovereign as it is often deployed by the Court and supplying a useful ana...
The purpose of this note is to emphasize that while the dual sovereignty doctrine is legally sound i...
Over and over again during the past few decades, the federal government has launched ambitious inter...
The term jurisdiction may be defined as the authority to affect legal interests -- to prescribe rule...
This Article offers a coherent way of thinking about double jeopardy rules among sovereigns. Its the...
The Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause is an analytically gnarly beast. What seems like a fairly ...
This Note argues that the application of the dual sovereignty doctrine to cases involving successive...
Under the judicially created dual-sovereignty exception, a defendant may be prosecuted by state and ...
This article analyzes the U. S. constitutional law interpreting the concept of “same offence.” Inclu...
Today, it is quite possible for a criminal defendant who has violated the laws of several countries ...
Immunities in international law expose multifaceted tensions between goals of international stabilit...
In Gamble v. United States, the defendant questioned the constitutionality of the dual sovereignty d...
The thesis of this Article is that the Constitution vests in the Supreme Court original and exclusiv...
This symposium Essay uses the private law notion of a false conflict of laws to develop a coherent...
This Article presents a new account of the function served by universal jurisdiction (UJ). This doct...
The doctrine of the immunity of foreign governments from the adjudicatory and enforcement jurisdicti...
The purpose of this note is to emphasize that while the dual sovereignty doctrine is legally sound i...
Over and over again during the past few decades, the federal government has launched ambitious inter...
The term jurisdiction may be defined as the authority to affect legal interests -- to prescribe rule...
This Article offers a coherent way of thinking about double jeopardy rules among sovereigns. Its the...
The Constitution’s Double Jeopardy Clause is an analytically gnarly beast. What seems like a fairly ...
This Note argues that the application of the dual sovereignty doctrine to cases involving successive...
Under the judicially created dual-sovereignty exception, a defendant may be prosecuted by state and ...
This article analyzes the U. S. constitutional law interpreting the concept of “same offence.” Inclu...
Today, it is quite possible for a criminal defendant who has violated the laws of several countries ...
Immunities in international law expose multifaceted tensions between goals of international stabilit...
In Gamble v. United States, the defendant questioned the constitutionality of the dual sovereignty d...
The thesis of this Article is that the Constitution vests in the Supreme Court original and exclusiv...
This symposium Essay uses the private law notion of a false conflict of laws to develop a coherent...
This Article presents a new account of the function served by universal jurisdiction (UJ). This doct...
The doctrine of the immunity of foreign governments from the adjudicatory and enforcement jurisdicti...
The purpose of this note is to emphasize that while the dual sovereignty doctrine is legally sound i...
Over and over again during the past few decades, the federal government has launched ambitious inter...
The term jurisdiction may be defined as the authority to affect legal interests -- to prescribe rule...