This article explores in depth the law of nations, English domestic law, and English government practice from the late medieval period through the eighteenth century, and the U.S. constitutional law and government practice during the Founding and antebellum periods. I conclude that Chapman’s claims about due process and piracy suppression are incorrect. Both Parliament and the U.S. Congress; both the Crown and its counselors and U.S Presidents and their advisers; both the Royal Navy and the U.S. Navy; and commentators both English and American believed that (1) pirates on the high seas could lawfully be subject to extrajudicial killing, but that (2) the criminal justice system was usually the preferred approach to dealing with pirates, and ...
This Essay presents the first systematic empirical study of the incidence of universal jurisdiction ...
Defining the scope of the Constitution’s application outside U.S. territory is more important than e...
Recognizing the need for the United States government to take a leadership role in confronting and s...
This article explores in depth the law of nations, English domestic law, and English government prac...
This commentary seeks to explain and evaluate the reasoning behind the recent finding, in United Sta...
The pirates of the Caribbean are back. Not in another fantastical film but in the litigation over th...
This article explores the seminal United States Supreme Court decision of United States v. Smith (18...
During the February 1820 Term, the Supreme Court of the United States decided four significant pirac...
This article will first discuss the historical background of mutiny, describing several of the major...
This article will first discuss the historical background of mutiny, describing several of the major...
At least for the time being, the international community must rely on national courts to prosecute m...
Nations are not prosecuting piracy suspects with any regularity. One reason cited for this culture o...
Clarity would be promoted by treating Article III—which primarily concerns subject matter jurisdicti...
This article is a sequel to the authors\u27 last article, On the Evolution of the Law of Internation...
Following the November 2008 pirate attack on the Danish merchant ship CEC Future, interpreter and ne...
This Essay presents the first systematic empirical study of the incidence of universal jurisdiction ...
Defining the scope of the Constitution’s application outside U.S. territory is more important than e...
Recognizing the need for the United States government to take a leadership role in confronting and s...
This article explores in depth the law of nations, English domestic law, and English government prac...
This commentary seeks to explain and evaluate the reasoning behind the recent finding, in United Sta...
The pirates of the Caribbean are back. Not in another fantastical film but in the litigation over th...
This article explores the seminal United States Supreme Court decision of United States v. Smith (18...
During the February 1820 Term, the Supreme Court of the United States decided four significant pirac...
This article will first discuss the historical background of mutiny, describing several of the major...
This article will first discuss the historical background of mutiny, describing several of the major...
At least for the time being, the international community must rely on national courts to prosecute m...
Nations are not prosecuting piracy suspects with any regularity. One reason cited for this culture o...
Clarity would be promoted by treating Article III—which primarily concerns subject matter jurisdicti...
This article is a sequel to the authors\u27 last article, On the Evolution of the Law of Internation...
Following the November 2008 pirate attack on the Danish merchant ship CEC Future, interpreter and ne...
This Essay presents the first systematic empirical study of the incidence of universal jurisdiction ...
Defining the scope of the Constitution’s application outside U.S. territory is more important than e...
Recognizing the need for the United States government to take a leadership role in confronting and s...