Many scholars have criticized Congressional apology resolutions for slavery as inadequate and ineffective. Ironically, Congress may look to China’s apologetic justice in intentional intellectual property infringements to learn valuable lessons about apologies and how to incorporate them into righting wrongs. China requires that the wrongdoer who intentionally harms or infringes the intellectual property rights of another make a public apology in a newspaper or trade journal, in addition to stopping the harm and paying for compensatory damages and costs. If the wrongdoer does not timely make the public apology, the infringed party will draft and publish the public apology in the wrongdoer’s name and charge the associated expenses to the wron...
Parties often take judgment enforcement for granted in the United States as a result of decades of r...
The Global Online Freedom Act of 2007 promotes freedom of expression on the Internet by prohibiting ...
Can money motivate heroic deeds? China believes so. After Xu XX v. Peng Yu developed a poor judicial...
Many scholars have criticized Congressional apology resolutions for slavery as inadequate and ineffe...
It is afrequent refrain that the world is shrinking. In this same vein, the global influence of Ch...
The article will proceed as follows. Part I discusses the three bodies of law constituting China’s t...
Counterfeiting and the piracy of consumer goods in China are serious and globally recognized problem...
This article is the first exploration of the Chinese notion of apology from a comparative legal pers...
As China ascends to its place as a leading nation on the world stage, questions have arisen concerni...
In 2011, a year after British Petroleum (BP) \u27s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, ConocoPhillips\u...
Compared with the long history of U.S. patent law, Chinese patent law is still in its infancy. Never...
China has a notorious reputation for infringing on intellectual property, especially copyrights. Des...
How should American courts understand China’s legal system? How do they understand it, and are they ...
In a country such as China, with abundant consumer products and the inevitability of product defects...
This essay is contributed in recognition of Don Wallace’s dedication to furthering procedural justic...
Parties often take judgment enforcement for granted in the United States as a result of decades of r...
The Global Online Freedom Act of 2007 promotes freedom of expression on the Internet by prohibiting ...
Can money motivate heroic deeds? China believes so. After Xu XX v. Peng Yu developed a poor judicial...
Many scholars have criticized Congressional apology resolutions for slavery as inadequate and ineffe...
It is afrequent refrain that the world is shrinking. In this same vein, the global influence of Ch...
The article will proceed as follows. Part I discusses the three bodies of law constituting China’s t...
Counterfeiting and the piracy of consumer goods in China are serious and globally recognized problem...
This article is the first exploration of the Chinese notion of apology from a comparative legal pers...
As China ascends to its place as a leading nation on the world stage, questions have arisen concerni...
In 2011, a year after British Petroleum (BP) \u27s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, ConocoPhillips\u...
Compared with the long history of U.S. patent law, Chinese patent law is still in its infancy. Never...
China has a notorious reputation for infringing on intellectual property, especially copyrights. Des...
How should American courts understand China’s legal system? How do they understand it, and are they ...
In a country such as China, with abundant consumer products and the inevitability of product defects...
This essay is contributed in recognition of Don Wallace’s dedication to furthering procedural justic...
Parties often take judgment enforcement for granted in the United States as a result of decades of r...
The Global Online Freedom Act of 2007 promotes freedom of expression on the Internet by prohibiting ...
Can money motivate heroic deeds? China believes so. After Xu XX v. Peng Yu developed a poor judicial...