This Article examines whether the Define and Punish clause of the Constitution empowers Congress to criminalize foreign conduct unconnected to the United States. Answering this question requires exploring the Constitution\u27s Piracies and Felonies provision. While it is hard to believe this can still be said of any constitutional provision, no previous work has examined the scope of the Piracies and Felonies powers. Yet the importance of this inquiry is more than academic. Despite its obscurity, the Piracies and Felonies power is the purported Art. I basis for a statute currently in force, which represents Congress\u27s most aggressive use of universal jurisdiction. Moreover, the limits on Congress\u27s power under the Felonies power...
This Article comprehensively addresses Congress’s powers under the Constitution’s Foreign Commerce C...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
The pirates of the Caribbean are back. Not in another fantastical film but in the litigation over th...
This paper explores the Article I limits faced by Congress in exercising universal jurisdiction (UJ)...
Perhaps no Article I power of Congress is less understood than the power to define and punish . . . ...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
The Constitution gives Congress the power to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Na...
The Constitution gives Congress the power to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Na...
The Offenses Clause of the United States Constitution gives Congress the authority to define and pu...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
Never in the nation\u27s history has the scope and meaning of Congress\u27s power to Define and Pun...
This Article addresses the possible constitutional limits on the ability of the United States to pro...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
This Article comprehensively addresses Congress’s powers under the Constitution’s Foreign Commerce C...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
The pirates of the Caribbean are back. Not in another fantastical film but in the litigation over th...
This paper explores the Article I limits faced by Congress in exercising universal jurisdiction (UJ)...
Perhaps no Article I power of Congress is less understood than the power to define and punish . . . ...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
The Constitution gives Congress the power to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Na...
The Constitution gives Congress the power to “define and punish . . . Offences against the Law of Na...
The Offenses Clause of the United States Constitution gives Congress the authority to define and pu...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
Never in the nation\u27s history has the scope and meaning of Congress\u27s power to Define and Pun...
This Article addresses the possible constitutional limits on the ability of the United States to pro...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
This Article comprehensively addresses Congress’s powers under the Constitution’s Foreign Commerce C...
One of the principal aims of the U.S. Constitution was to give the federal government authority to c...
The pirates of the Caribbean are back. Not in another fantastical film but in the litigation over th...