American laws increasingly regulate the conduct of foreigners abroad. The growth in extraterritorial laws, in no small part, can be traced to the effects test - a doctrine that instructs courts to presume that Congress intended to regulate extraterritorially when foreign conduct is found to have a substantial effect within the United States. For many scholars and lawyers, the effects test is the doctrinal lynchpin for determining the geographic reach of domestic laws. Territorial limits on legislative jurisdiction, on the other hand, are seen as anachronistic; a remnant of a pre-modern, pre-globalized world. This article takes a different, more skeptical view of the effects test. The article argues that many scholars have failed to apprecia...
Because of the broad jurisdiction American courts have asserted in cases arising under the Securitie...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
It is, in certain cases, impossible for persons to tell in advance which states will have effective ...
American laws increasingly regulate the conduct of foreigners abroad. The growth in extraterritorial...
The world has recently seen a tremendous expansion in countries using extraterritorial laws\u27-laws...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
This Article addresses an underexplored but critical aspect of the presumption against extraterritor...
The exact reach of the Defend Trade Secrets Act’s extraterritoriality provision has yet to be interp...
The presumption against extraterritoriality tells courts to read a territorial limit into statutes t...
In the last few years, and mostly unnoticed, courts have adopted a radically different approach to i...
In 1895, the New York Court of Appeals, in refusing to enforce a Kansas statute, referred to “a prin...
An update of the 1952 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, Steele v. Bulova, is arguably overdue in a...
Recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court as to the international reach of American antitr...
Territoriality is a foundational principle of international order, and U.S. laws have always operate...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Because of the broad jurisdiction American courts have asserted in cases arising under the Securitie...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
It is, in certain cases, impossible for persons to tell in advance which states will have effective ...
American laws increasingly regulate the conduct of foreigners abroad. The growth in extraterritorial...
The world has recently seen a tremendous expansion in countries using extraterritorial laws\u27-laws...
The extraterritorial application of U.S. law was a settled issue for a long time. For about sixty ye...
This Article addresses an underexplored but critical aspect of the presumption against extraterritor...
The exact reach of the Defend Trade Secrets Act’s extraterritoriality provision has yet to be interp...
The presumption against extraterritoriality tells courts to read a territorial limit into statutes t...
In the last few years, and mostly unnoticed, courts have adopted a radically different approach to i...
In 1895, the New York Court of Appeals, in refusing to enforce a Kansas statute, referred to “a prin...
An update of the 1952 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, Steele v. Bulova, is arguably overdue in a...
Recent decisions by the United States Supreme Court as to the international reach of American antitr...
Territoriality is a foundational principle of international order, and U.S. laws have always operate...
Extraterritoriality is a negative form of transnationalism. It creates a paradox among state regulat...
Because of the broad jurisdiction American courts have asserted in cases arising under the Securitie...
Assertion by states of a right to regulate conduct beyond their borders has been a source of frequen...
It is, in certain cases, impossible for persons to tell in advance which states will have effective ...