A century ago, foreign governments and their actions were essentially beyond U.S. judicial reach. In the 1950s, however, U.S. courts began to govern more and more activities of foreign governments leading to a transformation in the modality of U.S. power directed abroad. Legal historians describe this as a transition from an “absolute” to a “restrictive” practice of sovereign immunity, and one dominant narrative explains the transition as a pragmatic move away from an obsolete model of “territorial sovereignty” to a more flexible, “de-territorialized” or even “de-spatialized” sovereignty better suited for a globalized economy. Through tracing key U.S. legal changes involving foreign sovereign governments from 1898 to 2014, with a focus on s...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
The political winds are changing, and a more liberal United States government may very well be recep...
This article uses the research from Kal Raustiala’s book, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? : T...
A century ago, foreign governments and their actions were essentially beyond U.S. judicial reach. In...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Combining legal interpretation with political science analysis, this Article highlights the competin...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Coordination of cross-border bankruptcies between 1870 and World War II offers a puzzling image. On ...
“Courts crossing borders was chosen as a title to convey the convergence of two realities in intern...
The ritual of condemnation of foreign corporations\u27 spoliations of the resources of developing co...
This (35 pp.) essay appears as a contribution to a law review symposium on the work of Harvard Law S...
Globalization represents the reality that we live in a time when the walls of sovereignty are no pro...
One consequence of the increasingly transnational nature of civil litigation is that U.S. courts mus...
Coordination of cross-border bankruptcies between 1870 and World War II offers a puzzling image. On ...
The globalization of the United States economy in the latter half of the twentieth century has foste...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
The political winds are changing, and a more liberal United States government may very well be recep...
This article uses the research from Kal Raustiala’s book, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? : T...
A century ago, foreign governments and their actions were essentially beyond U.S. judicial reach. In...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Combining legal interpretation with political science analysis, this Article highlights the competin...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Coordination of cross-border bankruptcies between 1870 and World War II offers a puzzling image. On ...
“Courts crossing borders was chosen as a title to convey the convergence of two realities in intern...
The ritual of condemnation of foreign corporations\u27 spoliations of the resources of developing co...
This (35 pp.) essay appears as a contribution to a law review symposium on the work of Harvard Law S...
Globalization represents the reality that we live in a time when the walls of sovereignty are no pro...
One consequence of the increasingly transnational nature of civil litigation is that U.S. courts mus...
Coordination of cross-border bankruptcies between 1870 and World War II offers a puzzling image. On ...
The globalization of the United States economy in the latter half of the twentieth century has foste...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
The political winds are changing, and a more liberal United States government may very well be recep...
This article uses the research from Kal Raustiala’s book, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? : T...