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In: --- J. Corp. L. --- (Apr./May 2022)
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In: Law and Philosophy. An International Journal for Jurisprudence and Legal Philosophy 2020, doi: 10.1007/s10982-020-09388-1. Link to open access article: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10982-020-09388-1
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In: American Journal of Legal History, Band 50, S. 157-199
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In: MM Textbooks 5
Sociolinguistics and the Legal Process is an introduction to language, law and society for advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students. Drawing on a wide range of topics, it explores what sociolinguistic research can tell us about how language works and doesn't work in the legal process
In: Valparaiso University Law Review, Band 44, Heft 1
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In: MI, 43
This book describes the role of Japanese contract law in protecting the distributor against unilateral terminations of distribution agreements. Based primarily on Japanese language legal material.
In: Innovation in International Law 3
In: International Law - Book Archive pre-2000
When a claimant demands an interpretation of a right in international law that goes beyond existing conventional, statutory or customary norms, proceedings enter the uncharted area of equity in international law. This original book tackles this complex subject with precision and authority. Evaluating past applications of equity, it contributes to improving the record of judicial performance in controversies for which equity is alleged to be relevant. Any decisionmaker confronted with a claim to apply equity will benefit greatly from this book. Published under the Transnational Publishers imprint
In: Proceedings of the annual meeting / American Society of International Law, Band 109, S. 269-272
ISSN: 2169-1118
The International Criminal Court (ICC or Court) is an institution born of necessity after a long and arduous process of many false starts. The struggle to establish a permanent international criminal tribunal stretches back to Nuremberg. The dream, which was especially poignant for the international criminal law community, for a permanent international criminal tribunal was realized with the adoption in 1998 of the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court. The treaty entered into force in 2002. Those were heady days for advocates and scholars concerned with curtailing impunity. No one was more ecstatic about the realization of the ICC than civil society actors across the globe, and particularly in Africa, where impunity has been an endemic problem. Victims who had never received justice at home saw an opportunity for vindication abroad. This optimism in the ICC was partially driven by the successes, however mixed, of two prior ad hoc international criminal tribunals—the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia.
In: International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Band 59, Heft 4, S. 895–910
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In: Journal of Law and Political Economy, Band 3, Heft 2
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Globalization is on the rise. The last few decades have been marked by dramatic reductions in transaction costs that have helped bring together local markets. Technological advances such as wireless telecommunications and the Internet have connected buyers and sellers of goods and services across the planet through transactions that were not even feasible, let alone cost-effective, as little as a decade ago. No less importantly, the systematic removal of regulatory barriers to international trade has facilitated economic globalization. At the forefront of international economic liberalization, the creation of the World Trade Organization ("WTO") in 1995 extended multilateral trading rules beyond trade in goods to cover transnational provision of services, protection of intellectual property rights, and technical and health-related standards. Hundreds of Regional Trade Agreements ("RTAs") that further reduce barriers are complemented by an even greater number of international investment protection agreements called Bilateral Investment Treaties ("BITs"). In the shadow of these economic developments, the same period has also witnessed the rise of transnational crime (roughly defined as serious crime whose perpetration and effects occur in more than one state) as a source of grave concern around the globe. Drug smuggling, arms trading, human trafficking, illegal sex trade, money laundering, wholesale intellectual property rights infringement- these and other illicit activities have flourished due to the advances of technology and the freer movement of goods, services, money, and people that characterize the modern world, just as legal international business transactions have flourished. There are, no doubt, direct links between technological progress and economic liberalization, on the one hand, and the growth of transnational crime and the accompanying anxiety, on the other hand. For example, illegal child pornography became easier to distribute via the Internet, and the removal of barriers to international trade ...
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In: International journal of law libraries: IJLL ; the official publication of the International Association of Law Libraries, Band 2, Heft 1, S. 20-21
ISSN: 2626-1316
In: The Australian yearbook of international law, Band 29, Heft 1, S. 238-240
ISSN: 2666-0229