This Article uses the jurisprudential dichotomy between two opposing types of legal requirements-- rules and standards --to examine extraterritorial regulation by the United States. It argues that there is natural push toward standards in extraterritorial regulation because numerous institutional actors either see standards as the best option in extraterritorial regulation or accept standards as a second-best option when their first choice (a rule favorable to their interests or their worldview) is not feasible. The Article explores several reasons for this push toward standards, including: statutory text, statutory interpretation theories, the nonbinary nature of the domestic/foreign characterization, the tendency of extraterritorial reg...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Whether a limitation is jurisdictional or not is an important but often obscure question. In an arti...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...
This Article uses the jurisprudential dichotomy between two opposing types of legal requirements — “...
This Article contends that the current state of the debate over the balancing of interests in the ex...
Part I of this article describes regulatory clashes involving different states\u27 public laws, and ...
This Article views the modern federal presumption against the extraterritoriality of U.S. law throug...
With the rise of transnational crime, domestic courts are increasingly called upon to make decisions...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
Recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court as to the international reach of American antitr...
The proper treatment of provisions that specify the extraterritorial scope of statutes has long been...
In the last few years, and mostly unnoticed, courts have adopted a radically different approach to i...
One of the corollaries of sovereignty is the duty of non-intervention in exclusive jurisdiction of o...
A nation can exercise two types of jurisdiction: territorial and extraterritorial. The exercise of e...
Despite the century-long reiteration of the principle of territorial sovereignty, States are increas...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Whether a limitation is jurisdictional or not is an important but often obscure question. In an arti...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...
This Article uses the jurisprudential dichotomy between two opposing types of legal requirements — “...
This Article contends that the current state of the debate over the balancing of interests in the ex...
Part I of this article describes regulatory clashes involving different states\u27 public laws, and ...
This Article views the modern federal presumption against the extraterritoriality of U.S. law throug...
With the rise of transnational crime, domestic courts are increasingly called upon to make decisions...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
Recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court as to the international reach of American antitr...
The proper treatment of provisions that specify the extraterritorial scope of statutes has long been...
In the last few years, and mostly unnoticed, courts have adopted a radically different approach to i...
One of the corollaries of sovereignty is the duty of non-intervention in exclusive jurisdiction of o...
A nation can exercise two types of jurisdiction: territorial and extraterritorial. The exercise of e...
Despite the century-long reiteration of the principle of territorial sovereignty, States are increas...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Whether a limitation is jurisdictional or not is an important but often obscure question. In an arti...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...