Eric Stein deserves our gratitude for making European integration accessible to American students and teachers. He has taught and written widely on this important subject, and the casebook he published with Hay and Waelbroeck is a valuable aid for dispelling what a judge of the Communities\u27 Court of Justice called splendid mutual ignorance. Following Judge Pescatore\u27s suggestion that it is time to take note of the experience gathered on both sides of the Atlantic, it seems worthwhile to compare the evolution of jurisdictional principles in the United States and in the Common Market
This Article places the recent evolution of U.S. personal jurisdiction in comparative context. Compa...
The European Court of Justice, as the sole judicial institution of the European Communities, has evo...
The European Community is an incipient federal structure, even if its scope of operation is limite...
Eric Stein deserves our gratitude for making European integration accessible to American students an...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...
Among Europeans, Eric Stein is generally considered to be the outstanding expert on European Communi...
In this Article, I explore the question of why constitutional review, but not American judicial revi...
This research was done against the background of the failure of the Hague negotiations for a ‘broad’...
Both the European Union and the United States are federal systems. Both divide law-making authority ...
Both the European Union and the United States are federal systems. Both divide law-making authority ...
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a series of recent cases, has restricted personal jurisdiction over corpo...
The Court of Justice of the European Communities has inspired much legal writing, including many boo...
There is little question that the potential implications of the Common Market for America and for Eu...
A Review of Courts and Free Markets: Perspectives From the United States and Europe edited by Terra...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
This Article places the recent evolution of U.S. personal jurisdiction in comparative context. Compa...
The European Court of Justice, as the sole judicial institution of the European Communities, has evo...
The European Community is an incipient federal structure, even if its scope of operation is limite...
Eric Stein deserves our gratitude for making European integration accessible to American students an...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...
Among Europeans, Eric Stein is generally considered to be the outstanding expert on European Communi...
In this Article, I explore the question of why constitutional review, but not American judicial revi...
This research was done against the background of the failure of the Hague negotiations for a ‘broad’...
Both the European Union and the United States are federal systems. Both divide law-making authority ...
Both the European Union and the United States are federal systems. Both divide law-making authority ...
The U.S. Supreme Court, in a series of recent cases, has restricted personal jurisdiction over corpo...
The Court of Justice of the European Communities has inspired much legal writing, including many boo...
There is little question that the potential implications of the Common Market for America and for Eu...
A Review of Courts and Free Markets: Perspectives From the United States and Europe edited by Terra...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
This Article places the recent evolution of U.S. personal jurisdiction in comparative context. Compa...
The European Court of Justice, as the sole judicial institution of the European Communities, has evo...
The European Community is an incipient federal structure, even if its scope of operation is limite...