In recent years, the “American Laws for American Courts” movement has swept across the country in an attempt to ban international law from U.S. state courts. This article specifically examines the Oklahoma Save Our State Amendment and the Arizona Foreign Decisions Act. In doing so, it addresses both the constitutional and policy problems with these attempts, observing that what the states have been trying to do is neither legal nor practical. It analyzes the inability of individual states to unilaterally avoid compliance with the United States’ international law obligations. It notes the absurdity in outlawing international law in order to uphold “American” rights when the well-known goals of international law itself are to protect the righ...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
In a recent referendum, the citizens of Oklahoma overwhelmingly approved a State constitutional amen...
With the rise of transnational crime, domestic courts are increasingly called upon to make decisions...
In recent years, the “American Laws for American Courts” movement has swept across the country in an...
In recent years, the “American Laws for American Courts” movement has swept across the country in an...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...
In the past year, initiatives to block judicial consideration of foreign or international law have b...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...
With the U.S. Supreme Court recently cutting back the reach of federal jurisdiction over causes of a...
To squarely address this decisional quagmire, this article examines the binding effect of ICJ orders...
This article addresses an issue with which federal courts have been forced to deal with increasing f...
Courts Resisting Courts explores a critical tension in international law: the relationship between i...
Courts Resisting Courts explores a critical tension in international law: the relationship between i...
This article seeks to deal systematically with a number of issues necessarily raised in any consider...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
In a recent referendum, the citizens of Oklahoma overwhelmingly approved a State constitutional amen...
With the rise of transnational crime, domestic courts are increasingly called upon to make decisions...
In recent years, the “American Laws for American Courts” movement has swept across the country in an...
In recent years, the “American Laws for American Courts” movement has swept across the country in an...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...
In the past year, initiatives to block judicial consideration of foreign or international law have b...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...
With the U.S. Supreme Court recently cutting back the reach of federal jurisdiction over causes of a...
To squarely address this decisional quagmire, this article examines the binding effect of ICJ orders...
This article addresses an issue with which federal courts have been forced to deal with increasing f...
Courts Resisting Courts explores a critical tension in international law: the relationship between i...
Courts Resisting Courts explores a critical tension in international law: the relationship between i...
This article seeks to deal systematically with a number of issues necessarily raised in any consider...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
In a recent referendum, the citizens of Oklahoma overwhelmingly approved a State constitutional amen...
With the rise of transnational crime, domestic courts are increasingly called upon to make decisions...