This article uses the research from Kal Raustiala’s book, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? : The Evolution of Territoriality in American Law, and the research from several of my articles on extraterritorial applications to explain how the United States has used the regulatory tool, extraterritoriality, since the time of the American Founding and how such use has differed as the United States gained power. The manner by which the United States has relied on extraterritoriality has differed depending on a particular era of history. For instance, this article articulates five eras that have characterized the U.S. decision-making process for extraterritoriality: cautionary, progressive, indiscriminate, withdrawal, and arbitrary. The Unite...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
The article discusses the international rule of law as of July 2011, focusing on a historical overvi...
Is the United States, as an international actor, different from all other international actors? If s...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
At the beginning of the twentieth century the United States laid claim to an overseas empire, consol...
At the beginning of the twentieth century the United States laid claim to an overseas empire, consol...
The United States has always been more than simply a group of united states. The constitutional hist...
Courts and commentators have long struggled to reconcile robust federalism doctrines with the text o...
This Article offers a new interpretation of the modern federal immigration power. At the end of the ...
This article analyzes methods and doctrines used by States to acquire territories. The role of the U...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
For much of this century, American foreign affairs law has assumed that there is a sharp distinction...
This Essay explores the role of embedded international law in U.S. constitutional interpretation, ...
Questions of legal extraterritoriality figure prominently in scholarship on legal pluralism, transna...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
The article discusses the international rule of law as of July 2011, focusing on a historical overvi...
Is the United States, as an international actor, different from all other international actors? If s...
Beginning in the late eighteenth century and running well into the twentieth, the United States clai...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
At the beginning of the twentieth century the United States laid claim to an overseas empire, consol...
At the beginning of the twentieth century the United States laid claim to an overseas empire, consol...
The United States has always been more than simply a group of united states. The constitutional hist...
Courts and commentators have long struggled to reconcile robust federalism doctrines with the text o...
This Article offers a new interpretation of the modern federal immigration power. At the end of the ...
This article analyzes methods and doctrines used by States to acquire territories. The role of the U...
This article is reproduced with permission from the April 2018 issue of the American Journal of Inte...
For much of this century, American foreign affairs law has assumed that there is a sharp distinction...
This Essay explores the role of embedded international law in U.S. constitutional interpretation, ...
Questions of legal extraterritoriality figure prominently in scholarship on legal pluralism, transna...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
The article discusses the international rule of law as of July 2011, focusing on a historical overvi...
Is the United States, as an international actor, different from all other international actors? If s...