Globalization of business has increasingly involved American attorneys in an ethical dilemma which is not just academic, but may result in disciplinary action against the attorney. What is counsel to do when it is discovered that overseas employment practices (legal in the foreign country) violate American law? May counsel, citing current case law, ethically advise management that discharge of a troublesome employee may be effected "legally" by simply transferring the employee overseas, then firing her? These ethical issues can be put in sharp focus by reviewing a provision of the 1991 Civil Rights Act (CRA) that extends application of the 1964 CRA to cover American citizens working overseas for American owned or controlled firms. Expansive...
The Comment concludes that the Boureslan majority adhered to the canon of statutory construction by ...
Taking some typical international practice situations, we can highlight the basic professional compe...
This article argues that the coercive use of immigration status or “status coercion” in civil procee...
This article examines two sources of ethical constraint on U.S. lawyers practicing international hum...
More than two million American citizens work in civilian jobs outside of the United States
Little attention has been devoted to ethical problems facing American lawyers engaged in commercial ...
This study analyzes the prior and current practice of the judiciary in deciding cases of extraterrit...
The United States Supreme Court held that Title VII does not apply extraterritorially to regulate em...
The presence of an estimated 11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the United States, of which an ...
Over the past decade or so, a massive exportation of U.S. lawyer ethics law, primarily to emerging d...
This Article discusses the tension between the Sixth Amendment analysis by courts on the issue of im...
Companies around the world increasingly are engaging in cross-border business transactions. Globaliz...
The present Code of Professional Responsibility (CPR) is essentially geared to guide the conduct of ...
The question of whether U.S. employment discrimination laws apply to international employers is comp...
Until very recently, one almost never heard mention of international issues among labor and employme...
The Comment concludes that the Boureslan majority adhered to the canon of statutory construction by ...
Taking some typical international practice situations, we can highlight the basic professional compe...
This article argues that the coercive use of immigration status or “status coercion” in civil procee...
This article examines two sources of ethical constraint on U.S. lawyers practicing international hum...
More than two million American citizens work in civilian jobs outside of the United States
Little attention has been devoted to ethical problems facing American lawyers engaged in commercial ...
This study analyzes the prior and current practice of the judiciary in deciding cases of extraterrit...
The United States Supreme Court held that Title VII does not apply extraterritorially to regulate em...
The presence of an estimated 11.5 million undocumented immigrants in the United States, of which an ...
Over the past decade or so, a massive exportation of U.S. lawyer ethics law, primarily to emerging d...
This Article discusses the tension between the Sixth Amendment analysis by courts on the issue of im...
Companies around the world increasingly are engaging in cross-border business transactions. Globaliz...
The present Code of Professional Responsibility (CPR) is essentially geared to guide the conduct of ...
The question of whether U.S. employment discrimination laws apply to international employers is comp...
Until very recently, one almost never heard mention of international issues among labor and employme...
The Comment concludes that the Boureslan majority adhered to the canon of statutory construction by ...
Taking some typical international practice situations, we can highlight the basic professional compe...
This article argues that the coercive use of immigration status or “status coercion” in civil procee...