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In: Studies in private international law volume 22
Foreword / The Hon William Gummow AC -- Commercial issues in private international law / Steven Rares -- In absentia : the evolution and reform of Aaustralian rules of adjudicatory jurisdiction / Andrew Dickinson -- The exercise of jurisdiction and the role of enforcement / Vivienne Bath -- The case management stay in private international law / Reid Mortensen -- The 2005 Hague convention : a panacea for non-exclusive and asymmetric jurisdiction agreements too? / Brooke Marshall -- Reciprocal recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments in china : the proposal of a registration system / Jie (Jeanne) Huang -- Paying attention to choice of law in international commercial arbitration, or, why the conflict of laws always matters / Benjamin Hayward -- The conflict of laws as a shared language for the cross-border application of statutes / Maria Hook -- Choice of law in the age of statutes : a defence of statutory interpretation after valve / Michael Douglas -- New and alternative approaches to proof of foreign law : a practitioners' perspective / Justin Hogan-Doran and Dominique Hogan-Doran -- The rise of party autonomy in commercial conflict of laws / TM Yeo -- Developing Australian private international law : the Hague choice of court convention & the Hague principles of choice of law in international commercial contracts / Mary Keyes -- Concluding remarks / The Hon Justice Paul Le Gay Brereton AM RFD.
I have taught Health Law for almost three decades. In the early years, the course was primarily about private law, the application of contract and tort principles in the context of health insurance coverage and medical care. Federal law of Medicare, Medicaid, EMTALA, and federal civil rights laws always made an appearance. Other federal statutes were added as they came along: HIPAA, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and GINA. Over the years, the course focused more and more on federal statutes until the passage of the Affordable Care Act ("ACA") in 2010 completed the transition Health law is now a public law course.1 It focuses on federal statutes, and students need to understand the role of Congress, federal agencies, the states, and federal courts. The course explores myriad forms of federalism including Medicaid's cooperative federalism, the ACA's "fall back" federalism where the federal government steps in only if the states opt out, and old-fashioned federal law preemption of state law. Health law is now statutory interpretation and administrative law principles in the context of health insurance coverage and health care. Health law continues to be applied law: public law that affects health, health insurance, health care, and public health. About a third to a half of my health law course is devoted to providing students with a better understanding of medical decision making, the organization of health care delivery system, insurance theory, health disparities, and the social determinants of health— how where we live, work, play, and pray impact health Most importantly, Health Law remains a powerful lens through which to explore issues of social justice, social welfare, and law. We all get sick and need medical care. Many of my students and their families have had serious health problems and struggled to access medical care. Some have been bankrupted financially because of the costs of medical care. They know something about health and health care. This course is an opportunity to explore what equity, fairness, and justice mean when we talk about health and healthcare.
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In: European journal of international law, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 23-57
ISSN: 1464-3596
In: International journal of law libraries: IJLL ; the official publication of the International Association of Law Libraries, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 32-33
ISSN: 2626-1316
In: Clarendon Law Ser.
A challenging, yet highly accessible, introduction to discrimination law which highlights the major issues and asks how the right to equality can be made more effective. This edition includes expanded material on how jurisdictions formulate grounds of discrimination with thematic analysis on topics such as racism, sexism, and LGBTQ+ rights.
In: International & comparative law quarterly: ICLQ, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 965
ISSN: 0020-5893
In: The Cambridge yearbook of European legal studies: CYELS, Band 23, S. 228-268
ISSN: 2049-7636
AbstractThis article proposes two broad ways to conceptualise EU competition law. EU competition law could be viewed as 'autonomous law' ('AL'), namely as a closed normative system a technocratic tool consisting in a set of rules that prohibit undue restraints of trade. Or, EU competition law could be viewed as 'responsive law' ('RL'), namely as a relatively open normative system and an interpretive practice that oscillates between openness and integrity. The responsiveness approach offers a compelling conceptualisation as it explains certain endogenous features of EU competition law: its fuzzy mandate, conceptually elastic vocabulary, and use of rules and standards. In addition, the responsiveness approach can clarify the role economics plays in EU competition law. It views economics as an 'ideological science', which, even though it cannot insulate this legal field from value disagreements and make it 'autonomous', it can provide a source for positive and normative interpretive statements. On this basis the responsiveness approach maintains that EU competition law is by design open—ie conceptually elastic and factually sensitive—and that its openness can enhance, but also undermine its integrity—ie its capacity to realise its objective in a rule of law compatible manner. These conflicts between openness and integrity are the cause of EU competition law's relative indeterminacy. To deal with the problem of indeterminacy, the RL approach proposes a tripartite legal-institutional modus operandi consisting in constructive interpretation, responsive enforcement, and catalytic adjudication. Hence, considering EU competition law as a form of responsive law has three major implications: first, it offers a new way for understanding how this legal field works and changes; second, it suggests a strategy for dealing with EU competition law's indeterminacy, and third it proposes a new framing for the discursive practices of EU competition law's epistemic community.
In: Zeitschrift für Rechtssoziologie, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 141-174
"Bis heute bringt die Rechtssoziologie für die Rechtsdogmatik, also für die Tätigkeit und die Erzeugnisse der methodisch kontrollierten Auslegung des kodifizierten Rechts, wenig Interesse auf. Ihren Gegenstand sieht die Rechtssoziologie in der Erforschung der empirischen sozialen Rechtswirklichkeit. Die gültigen Regeln der Auslegung des geltenden Rechts sind, sofern sie in der Rechtspraxis Beachtung finden, Bestandteil der Konstitution dieser Rechtswirklichkeit. Dem rechtssoziologischen Desinteresse an der Rechtsdogmatik liegt mithin explizit oder implizit die Annahme zu Grunde, dass die Rechtsdogmatik keinen beachtenswerten Beitrag dieser Art zur Konstitution der Rechtswirklichkeit leistet. Der vorliegende Beitrag untersucht einige Entwicklungslinien der Rechtssoziologie, die dieser Annahme Vorschub geleistet haben. In der Auseinandersetzung mit ihnen wird argumentiert, dass Anlass zu einer veränderten Bewertung der soziologischen Relevanz der dogmatischen Jurisprudenz besteht." (Autorenreferat)
In: Laws ; Volume 8 ; Issue 4
The 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees (&ldquo ; Refugee Convention&rdquo ; ) defines &lsquo ; persecution&rsquo ; based on five enumerated grounds: race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group, and political opinion. This list of protected groups has not changed in the nearly 70 years since its inception, although the political and social context that gave rise to the Refugee Convention has changed. This article examines how &lsquo ; membership in a particular social group&rsquo ; (&ldquo ; MPSG&rdquo ; ) has been interpreted, then surveys international human rights law, transnational criminal law, international humanitarian law, and international criminal law instruments to determine whether MPSG can encompass the broader protections afforded under other international law regimes. It concludes that the enumerated grounds are largely consistent with other instruments and protects, or at least has the potential to protect, many of the other categories through MPSG. However, as this ground is subject to domestic judicial interpretation and various analytical approaches taken in different countries, protection could be enhanced by amending the Refugee Convention to explicitly include additional protected groups from these other areas of international law, specifically international human rights law and international criminal law.
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In: European foreign affairs review, Band 15, Heft 2, S. 265-282
ISSN: 1875-8223
Abstract. This contribution analyses the relationship between international law and Community law in the light of two recent European Court of Justice (ECJ) cases on Article 307 EC, that is, the Kadi and bilateral investment treaties (BITs) judgments. The analysis discusses two concepts: (1) the concept of the 'very foundations of the Community legal order' and (2) the concept of 'hypothetical incompatibility'. The main argument that is advanced in this contribution is that with these two concepts, the ECJ has identified a constitutional dimension of Article 307 EC that hitherto has not been generally recognized. More specifically, it is argued that the main aim and result of this new line of jurisprudence is to protect the autonomy of European law from international law interferences by excluding as much as possible any conflicts between European and international law. In this sense, Article 307 EC is a tool for the ECJ to act as a gatekeeper by regulating the relationship between international law and Community law. Moreover, it is argued that the concept of the 'very foundations of the Community legal order' very much resembles the approach of the Federal German Constitutional Court, which in turn illustrates that the ECJ is performing the function of a true constitutional court of Europe. Accordingly, this article links up the external relations aspects of Article 307 EC with the closely connected internal constitutional aspects.
This Article asserts that during the twentieth century, American law has predominantly structured its relationship to foreign legal experience through a set of ideas and practices known as "law and development," which is irredeemably antithetical to the practice of comparative law. Centrally, law and development is built on the assumption that American law can be exported abroad to catalyze foreign legal development. The dismal record of such efforts has remained paradoxically popular while the field remains locked in repeating cycles of failure and optimism. This Article demonstrates that the history of law and development's failures is far older than has been traditionally recognized, and dates back to the turn of the twentieth century. In this era, foreign reform became a key part of the professional image of the modern American lawyer. At the same time, the origins of law and development were intimately tied to the decline of comparative law in American legal culture. This history reveals that the paradox of law and development's contemporary popularity can only be understood by recognizing the cultural politics that these developments embedded in the American legal community. The troubling legacy of this widely entrenched view of America as solely an exporter of legal knowledge presents pressing liabilities for American law, both internationally and domestically, on the competitive terrain of the twenty-first century. This Article concludes that in order to address these liabilities, America should categorically abandon law and development and should fundamentally reorient its relationship to foreign legal experience through a self-interested practice of comparative law. As exemplified in the debate over judicial citation of foreign precedents, this shift will require basic changes in how American legislative and administrative bodies relate to foreign law, as well as the place of comparative law in American law schools. Such a reorientation will enable America to strategically perceive foreign legal ...
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