1 online resource (PDF, page 173-205)Book review: Restoring the global judiciary: why the Supreme Court should rule in U.S. foreign affairs. By Martin S. Flaherty. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2019. Reviewed by Michael D. Ramse
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
Part I of this article identifies and analyzes some modern trends in judicial review in the area of ...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...
This essay reviews Professor Martin Flaherty’s outstanding and engaging recent book Restoring the Gl...
There is a great deal to admire in Professor Flaherty’s carefully researched volume, including the i...
Domestic court decisions often make headlines around the world. For example, recent U.S. Supreme Cou...
The chapter investigates the role of domestic courts in the management of foreign relations (FRs). C...
Book review: Narrowing the Nation's Power: the Supreme Court Sides with the States. By John T. Noona...
Book review: Narrowing the Nation\u27s Power: the Supreme Court Sides with the States. By John T. No...
The chapter investigates the role of domestic courts in the management of foreign relations (FRs). C...
There are many myths about the role of courts in foreign affairs and national security in Western de...
How should courts handle cases that implicate foreign relations or national security? What weight sh...
The increasing role that the US plays in the world can only mean a correspondingly greater role for ...
This Article considers whether the World Court can and should review the validity of acts of the Sec...
This article examines the judicial function of international courts by considering both what it is a...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
Part I of this article identifies and analyzes some modern trends in judicial review in the area of ...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...
This essay reviews Professor Martin Flaherty’s outstanding and engaging recent book Restoring the Gl...
There is a great deal to admire in Professor Flaherty’s carefully researched volume, including the i...
Domestic court decisions often make headlines around the world. For example, recent U.S. Supreme Cou...
The chapter investigates the role of domestic courts in the management of foreign relations (FRs). C...
Book review: Narrowing the Nation's Power: the Supreme Court Sides with the States. By John T. Noona...
Book review: Narrowing the Nation\u27s Power: the Supreme Court Sides with the States. By John T. No...
The chapter investigates the role of domestic courts in the management of foreign relations (FRs). C...
There are many myths about the role of courts in foreign affairs and national security in Western de...
How should courts handle cases that implicate foreign relations or national security? What weight sh...
The increasing role that the US plays in the world can only mean a correspondingly greater role for ...
This Article considers whether the World Court can and should review the validity of acts of the Sec...
This article examines the judicial function of international courts by considering both what it is a...
Since the mid-1980s, U.S. and foreign parties have filed more than 100,000 lawsuits in U.S. federal ...
Part I of this article identifies and analyzes some modern trends in judicial review in the area of ...
This Note will argue that federal courts need to be more “disciplined” in their deference determinat...