In 1975, the United States took steps to prevent its national security from being undermined by foreign investment through the creation of the Committee for Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS). CFIUS is an interagency committee meant to review and approve mergers and acquisitions of US companies that have a relation, however tangential, to national security. CFIUS has evolved since its inception from a relatively benign review mechanism to a sophisticated shield with the power to block almost any questionable foreign transactions involving US companies. This Note compares CFIUS to the investment regulations of Mexico, Chile, and Brazil, specifically those regulations focused on guaranteeing the national security of these countri...
With increasing injections of foreign capital in the United States and rising national security conc...
The proliferation of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) has resulted in an unstable political, legal, and...
Merger law in the United States has historically relied on a system of private ordering with as litt...
The era of globalization has produced previously unimaginable economic benefits by spurring linkages...
The regulatory regime that governs the national security review of foreign acquisitions of U.S. comp...
State and local pension funds have billions of dollars invested in global markets, and often use the...
Since the passage of the Exon-Florio Amendment in 1988, foreign investors face the new risk that the...
Third World nations have been attempting to balance foreign investment needs with the desire to both...
Discusses the Exon-Florio Provision of the Omnibus Trade & Competitiveness Act. It gives the Presid...
This Note addresses the transformation of foreign direct investment in the United States in light of...
Although much media scrutiny on foreign investment in the United States focuses on concerns about Ch...
An increasing number of countries establish FDI screening mechanisms to manage threats to security i...
The proposed acquisition of major operations in six major U.S. ports by Dubai Ports World and of Uno...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Foreign...
The main purpose in protecting private foreign investment is to encourage capital to move to newly d...
With increasing injections of foreign capital in the United States and rising national security conc...
The proliferation of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) has resulted in an unstable political, legal, and...
Merger law in the United States has historically relied on a system of private ordering with as litt...
The era of globalization has produced previously unimaginable economic benefits by spurring linkages...
The regulatory regime that governs the national security review of foreign acquisitions of U.S. comp...
State and local pension funds have billions of dollars invested in global markets, and often use the...
Since the passage of the Exon-Florio Amendment in 1988, foreign investors face the new risk that the...
Third World nations have been attempting to balance foreign investment needs with the desire to both...
Discusses the Exon-Florio Provision of the Omnibus Trade & Competitiveness Act. It gives the Presid...
This Note addresses the transformation of foreign direct investment in the United States in light of...
Although much media scrutiny on foreign investment in the United States focuses on concerns about Ch...
An increasing number of countries establish FDI screening mechanisms to manage threats to security i...
The proposed acquisition of major operations in six major U.S. ports by Dubai Ports World and of Uno...
A letter report issued by the Government Accountability Office with an abstract that begins "Foreign...
The main purpose in protecting private foreign investment is to encourage capital to move to newly d...
With increasing injections of foreign capital in the United States and rising national security conc...
The proliferation of sovereign wealth funds (SWFs) has resulted in an unstable political, legal, and...
Merger law in the United States has historically relied on a system of private ordering with as litt...