This Note examines recent interventions in corporate human rights lawsuits by the executive branch from both legal and political perspectives. It first identifies a nascent trend in human rights litigation in U.S. courts-namely, the propensity of the Bush administration to intervene on behalf of corporate defendants accused of violating human rights in the developing world-by examining the factual and procedural history of three contemporary lawsuits. It then explores the role of the political question, act of state, and international comity doctrines in these and similar suits, and advances a method for applying all three doctrines in a human rights-friendly manner. Finally, the Note examines the Bush administration\u27s interventions fr...
The almost two decade-long bonanza of civil litigation concerning gross human rights violations comm...
We should no longer expect the Alien Tort Statute to be the principal federal statute that deters ov...
The almost two decade-long bonanza of civil litigation concerning gross human rights violations comm...
This Note examines recent interventions in corporate human rights lawsuits by the executive branch f...
This article explores whether transnational corporations or their executives can be held criminally ...
In this paper, Dr. Reed explores issues of corporate civil liability for human rights violations. Th...
The article addresses the vexing problem of holding corporations liable for assisting in the soverei...
Historically, international law consisted primarily of substantive norms, leaving it to individual n...
Corporations inevitably violate human rights in a variety of ways. As corporations evolved into mass...
[Excerpt] On September 18, 2002, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that a United States base...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
In June 2001, eleven Indonesian villagers filed suit in a U.S. District Court against Exxon Mobil Co...
International human rights law is generally thought to apply directly to states, not to corporations...
Two literatures - business and human rights and transitional justice - can be usefully combined to c...
This Article begins from the premise that the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) no longer serves a useful pur...
The almost two decade-long bonanza of civil litigation concerning gross human rights violations comm...
We should no longer expect the Alien Tort Statute to be the principal federal statute that deters ov...
The almost two decade-long bonanza of civil litigation concerning gross human rights violations comm...
This Note examines recent interventions in corporate human rights lawsuits by the executive branch f...
This article explores whether transnational corporations or their executives can be held criminally ...
In this paper, Dr. Reed explores issues of corporate civil liability for human rights violations. Th...
The article addresses the vexing problem of holding corporations liable for assisting in the soverei...
Historically, international law consisted primarily of substantive norms, leaving it to individual n...
Corporations inevitably violate human rights in a variety of ways. As corporations evolved into mass...
[Excerpt] On September 18, 2002, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that a United States base...
During the last quarter of a century, litigation in United States courts to address hum...
In June 2001, eleven Indonesian villagers filed suit in a U.S. District Court against Exxon Mobil Co...
International human rights law is generally thought to apply directly to states, not to corporations...
Two literatures - business and human rights and transitional justice - can be usefully combined to c...
This Article begins from the premise that the Alien Tort Statute (ATS) no longer serves a useful pur...
The almost two decade-long bonanza of civil litigation concerning gross human rights violations comm...
We should no longer expect the Alien Tort Statute to be the principal federal statute that deters ov...
The almost two decade-long bonanza of civil litigation concerning gross human rights violations comm...