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Academic Journals
- 198
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From:Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (Vol. 53, Issue 5)Since the adoption of the UN Charter, an unending debate concerning the permissible exceptions to the use of force prohibition has filled the pages of countless law reviews. The resulting legal regime, the jus ad bellum,...
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From:Employee Relations Law Journal (Vol. 42, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedPeople have the right to work in a safe and secure environment. This concept is clearly conveyed by many international conventions and treaties. For example, Article 23. (1) of the United Declaration of Human Rights...
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From:Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law (Vol. 53, Issue 4)The United States, Canada, and Mexico have ratified a multilateral trade agreement (the "USMCA") that contains a highly unusual provision. This provision (referred to as the "Poison Pill") is intended to deter the...
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From:Florida Bar Journal (Vol. 80, Issue 10)The U.S. Supreme Court issued two notable opinions in 2006 affecting federal jurisdiction. Wachovia v. Schmidt, 126 S. Ct. 941 (2006), was decided on January 17, 2006. The Supreme Court held, for purposes of federal...
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From:Yale Law Journal (Vol. 106, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedUsing the political accountability theory to constrain Congress's power under the Exceptions Clause to manipulate the Supreme Court's jurisdiction has doctrinal support and reconciles the words of Article III with the...
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From:Papers on Language & Literature (Vol. 56, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedTravelling, emigration, and immigration have featured so prominently in Paul Muldoon's poetry that his can deservedly be called an art of the late modern wanderer, for whom "there is no reassuring ultimate destination,...
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From:Case Western Reserve Law Review (Vol. 64, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedII. A (CLOSING) POLITICAL WINDOW FOR SECURING RELIGIOUS LIBERTY In the past decade, support for same-sex marriage has escalated, a phenomenon that will only continue. This Part, along with Part III, demonstrates that...
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From:Houston Journal of International Law (Vol. 36, Issue 2)
Removing the FCPA facilitation payments exception: enforcement tools for a cleaner business as usual
I. INTRODUCTION This statement issued by Kenneth Clarke, the United Kingdom's Secretary of State for Justice, is a good reminder regarding who loses out when corrupt payments are permitted as a part of doing... -
From:Employee Relations Law Journal (Vol. 35, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedDuring these challenging economic times, people are scrutinizing more than ever all aspects of their financial situation, including the management of their retirement plans. Occasionally, this examination leads to...
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From:Case Western Reserve Law Review (Vol. 66, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedB. Judicial Limitations on Quarles. By the time of the April 2013 Tsarnaev interrogation, the longest Quarles-based interrogation any state or federal court had approved of since 1984, outside the hostage negotiation...
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From:William and Mary Law Review (Vol. 59, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedCriticism of the hearsay exceptions embodied in the Federal Rules of Evidence has reached a fever pitch in recent years. With scholars calling for the abrogation of the entire hearsay regime or of individual exceptions...
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From:Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (Vol. 109, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe Federal Bank Robbery Act had been on the books for seventy years by the time the federal appellate courts began to openly quarrel about the necessary elements of attempted bank robbery under the first paragraph of...
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From:Melbourne University Law Review (Vol. 38, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedQuestions over whether and, if so, how copyright law should protect works of fact and information have occupied the courts of several common law countries in recent decades. In Australia, they recently came to the fore...
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From:Albany Law Review (Vol. 74, Issue 3)With homicide your victim isn't going to be interviewed; their trauma is over. In most property crimes sure there is trauma, your car was stolen. But nothing can compare to sexual assault. We don't get enough training...
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From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 128, Issue 6)FAMILY LAW--MARRIAGE REQUIREMENTS--NEW YORK SUPREME COURT HOLDS STATUTORY EXCEPTION TO MARRIAGE LICENSE REQUIREMENT GENERALLY INAPPLICABLE TO OUT-OF-STATE MARRIAGES.--Ponorovskaya v. Stecklow, 987 N.Y.S.2d 543 (Sup. Ct....
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From:Harvard Law Review (Vol. 127, Issue 1)Among the mechanisms meant to correct errors in the U.S. criminal justice system is Rule 52(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which states that "[a] plain error that affects substantial rights may be...
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From:McGill Law Journal (Vol. 52, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThe author contends that the Supreme Court of Canada was right in creating the "principled exception" to privity of contract in its decisions in London Drugs and Fraser River but not for the reasons given in those...
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From:Defense Counsel Journal (Vol. 84, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedMORE and more businesses are waking up to the importance of big data as a strategic resource. By analyzing the purchase history of its customers, a business can easily identify purchase trends and patterns. The...
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From:Northern Review (Issue 37) Peer-ReviewedAbstract: The European Union (EU) and Russia have a strategic partnership while also co-operating extensively in the framework of various northern regional institutions. However, their relatively low-key mutual...
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From:Duke Law Journal (Vol. 63, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT This Article examines the intersection of patent law and academic science. It advances two novel claims about the internalization of academic science within the patent system and the concomitant evolution of...