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Click here to return to list February 2013
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NEW YORK JOINT INTERNATIONAL LAW PROJECT
February 2013
JOURNALS A – H
To view table of contents of all journals listed below, scroll down
To view table of contents of a specific journal, click on journal title
AMERICAN UNIVERSITY INTERNATIONAL LAW REVIEW, v. 27, no. 3 (BLS, NYLS)
BROOKLYN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, v. 38, no. 1, 2012 (BLS, CUNY, NYLS)
LES CAHIERS DE DROIT, v. 53, no. 4, DECEMBER, 2012 (BLS, NYLS)
THE CAMBRIDGE LAW JOURNAL, v. 7, pt. 3, 2012 (BLS, NYLS)
CHINESE JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL LAW, v. 11, no. 4, December, 2012 (NYLS)
COLUMBIA HUMAN RIGHTS LAW REVIEW, v. 44, no. 1, Fall, 2012
COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF ASIAN LAW, v. 25, no. 2, Summer, 2012 (BLS, CUNY, NYLS)
THE COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN LAW, v. 18, no. 3, Summer, 2012 (BLS, NYLS)
COLUMBIA JOURNAL OF TRANSNATIONAL LAW, v. 51, no. 1, 2012 (BLS, NYLS)
COMMUNICATIONS: THE EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, v. 37, no. 4, 2012 (NYLS)
COMPARATIVE LABOR LAW & POLICY JOURNAL, v. 34, no. 1, Fall, 2012 (BLS, NYLS)
COMPARATIVE POLITICS, v. 45, no. 2, January 2013 (NYLS)
THE EDINBURGH LAW REVIEW, v. 16, no. 3, September, 2012 (CUNY)
THE ECONOMIST, v. 405, no. 8809, November 3, 2012 (NYLS)
ETHICS, v. 123, no. 1, October, 2012 (BLS, CUNY, NYLS)
EUROPEAN COMPETITION LAW REVIEW, v. 33, no. 11, 2012 (NYLS)
EUROPEAN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY REVIEW, v. 34, no. 12, 2012 (NYLS)
FAMILY LAW, v. 42, December, 2012 (NYLS)
FLINDERS LAW JOURNAL, v. 14, no. 2, December, 2012 (CUNY)
FORDHAM INTERNATIONAL LAW JOURNAL, v. 35, no. 6, November, 2012 (BLS, CUNY, NYLS)
FOREIGN AFFAIRS, v. 92, no. 1, January – February, 2013 (BLS, NYLS)
FOREIGN POLICY, December, 2012 (NYLS)
THE GEORGE WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL LAW REVIEW, v. 44, no. 3, 2012 (BLS, NYLS)
GEORGETOWN IMMIGRATION LAW JOURNAL, v. 25, no. 4, Summer, 2011 (BLS, CUNY, NYLS)
HUMAN RIGHTS REVIEW, v. 13, no. 4, December, 2012 (CUNY, NYLS)
NYLS
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BL'S
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 3
AcADEMY ON HuMAN RIGHTS AND HuMANITARIAN LAw
ARTICLES AND ESSAYS ANALYZING THE RIGHTS OF CHILDREN
AND INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW
Prologue ............................... Claudio Grossman
505
Introduction ............................... Claudia Martin
& Diego Rodriguez-Pinz6n
509
lncidencia de Ia Convencion
sobre los derechos del nino en
Ia precision del/us cogens
internacional ............... Maria del Rosario Carmona Luque
511
The Spectrum for Child justice in the
International Human Rights Framework:
From "Reclaiming the Delinquent Child"
to Restorative justice .......................... Violet Odala
543
La interpretacion del articulo 19 de Ia
Convencion Americana sobre Derechos
Humanos en Ia jurisprudencia contenciosa
de Ia Corte lnteramericana de Derechos
Humanos: 1Fueron superados los
estandares establecidos en Ia Opinion
Consultiva No 17? ...................... Con stanza Argentieri
581
The Extraterritorial Obligation to Prevent
the Use of Child Soldiers .................. Tracey B. C. Begley
613
Consideraciones juridicas sobre
los derechos de los ninos
migrantes ................ Maria Cristina Rodriguez de Taborda
643
Implementing the Children's
Rights Agenda in Kenya: Taking
Stock of the Progress, Hurdles,
and Prospects ........................... James Foro/e jarso
673
~~
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BlS
BROOKLYN JOURNAL
OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
VOLUME 38
2012
NUMBER 1
CONTENTS
Articles
Reflections on the African Union's Right to Intervene
Ntombizozuko Dyani·Mhango
The "Americanization" of Legal Education in South Korea:
Challenges and Opportunities
RosaKim
1
49
Roscoe Pound in China: A Lost Precedent for the Liabilities
of American Legal Exceptionalism
Jedidiah J. Kroncke
77
Property Insecurity
,Terra Lawson-Remer
145
The Dangers of Constitution-Making
William Partlett
193
Essay
Rule of Law Operations in the Combat Environment: A
Judge Advocate's Perspective as a Legal Mentor
Thomas J. Bogar
239
Notes
Cambodia v. Thailand: A Case Study on the Use of
Provisional Measures to Protect Human Rights in
International Border Disputes
Michelle Barnett
269
The Responsibility to Protect After Libya: Humanitarian
Prevention as Customary International Law
Sari Bernstein
305
The Israeli Anti-Boycott Law:- Balancing the Need For
National Legitimacy Against the Rights of Dissenting
Individuals
Liar A. Brinn
345
Funding Entrepreneurial Ventures in China: Proposals to
More Effectively Regulate Chinese Foreign Private Issuers
Alexander E. Csordas
373
The Foreign Corrupt Practices Act: Toward a Definition of
"Foreign Official"
Katherine M Morgan
415
Over~ Detention: Asylum·Seekers, International Law, and
Path Dependency
Alexandra Olsen
451
·NYLS
;BlS
LES CAHIERS DE DROIT
v o I u m e 5 3, n u m
er o
4
decembre 2012
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Table des matieres
Pages
Presentation
L'avenir de Ia liberte d'expression: quels enjeux, queUes
menaces ? ...... ... .... . .. .. .. .. . .. .. ...... .... .. ....... ...... ... ... ... .. ....... .. .... ... ... ...... ...... ... . 683
Christian Brunelle et Louis-Philippe Lampron
La signification du droit a Ia liberte d'expression au crepuscule de
!'ideal............................................................................................................. 687
Stephane Bernatchez
Histoire et liberte d'expression................................................................... 715
Jean Morange
La protection renforcee .de Ia liberte d'expression politique dans le
contexte de Ia Convention europeenne des droits de l'homme............... 739
Xavier Bioy
La manifestation: une forme d'expression collective.............................. 761
Gabriel Babineau
Qu'est-ce qu'un «delit d'opinion»? ..................................•....................... 793
Thomas Hochmann
Laliberte d'expression est-elle en phase avec I' action syndicale? ......... 813
Pierre Verge
La liberte d'expression en contexte de crise: le cas de Ia greve
etudiante........................................................................................................ 831
Christian Brunelle, Louis· Philippe Lampron et Myriam Roussel
La liberte d'expression face aux sentiments religieux: approche
europeenne .................................................................... _.............................. 861
Ruth Dijoux
Trademarks Worth a Thousand Words: Freedom of Expression and
the Use of the Trademarks of others......................................................... 877 ·
Teresa Scassa
***
Livres ret;us ................................................................................................... 909.
Part :>
[20 !2] C.LJ.
Volwne 71
THE
DIS
CAMBRIDGE
LAW JOURNAL
November 2012
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CASE AND COMMENT
Yu!ws Caitat SARL v OJSC Rosru!ft Oil Compa'fl)l
·, R. {Munir) v Secietmy of State for the Home Departmen~·
R. (Alvi) v Secretary if State for the Home Department
Austm v United Kingdom
Al-Khawa;ja and Takry v United Kmgdom
Chandler v Cape pic
Delaney v Pickelt
JGE v Trustees rif the Portsnwuth
Roman Catholic Diocesan Trust
Test Claimants in the FII Group litigation v Revenue
and (;ustoms CommissiOW!I:r
Gowv Grant
Seldon v Cla:rkson Wright & Jakes
International law - act of state
Immigration - separation of powers
Civil liberties - "kettling" and protest
Criminal law- hearsay evidence
Negligence- duty of care
Tort- illegality defence
Vicarious liability - child abuse
1
Restitution- tax not due
Family- cohabitation
Employment - retirement age
Children - paramountcy principle
Intellectual property- definition
465
468
472
475
478
481
485
488
4B2
YC v United Kmgdam
495
498
Phillips v Mulcai:re
501
ARTICLES
Remedies Against the EU Institutions after Lisbon: An Era of Opportunity?:
ALBERTINA ALBORS-LLORRI'IS
507
Free Movement, Federalism and Institutional Choice: A Canada-EU Comparison:
AIJCIA HINAREJOS
The Good Constitution: SIRJOHJ'.T LAWS
Bribes and Secret Commissions Again: LORD PETER &IILLETI
Recasting Vicarious Liability: PHJLUP MORGAN
Mapping Legal Research: MATITIAS M. SIEMS AND DAJTIIi MAC StriDGH
Legal Certainty and Cartel Criminalisation within the EU Member States:
537
567
583
615
651
PETER WHELAN
BOOK REVIEWS
Di\WN 0UVJ'.R .\i'll) CARID FUSAR.n- Ho,;,
C:on,titutions Change: A Compa•atiw Swdy
Scrrr-r SHAPI1l.O: Legality
GUN l"Hf:it TP.UBNER: Network,; a> O.>nncct.ed
709
LI'Si'l-:K BRIC'Kii-1.-I.N: l..3wye; Barons: What Their
712
Rl)BERT M. FRAKr~~: Compiling the CoUatio Legum
Pr·:TR1\ 00llN!':!{ AND lvl~IUIN (.()UGHl.lN:
Corttracts
The Twilight of Constitutionalism?
NA-[•\llE KLEIN: Maritime Security and the Law
of the Sea
Sri.VIA 0'.->..~C0\..1: Sentencing in International
Crimina! Law: The UN a.d /we Tribufl<>l< and
Future l'ersp<clive,- !Or the ICC
.)UAK!M ZANDER: The Application of the
Prccauticmary Principle in Pra<.tkc
BI:.ITRIZ G>\I..CIA: The Amazon from an
lntcrn,.tional I..-.w Perspective
703
706
725
Contingency \-'"ces Really C1>.<t America
ML>15aicarum tt Romanarum irt Late Antiquity
7.')1
Rl'.HI.C:(:,\ PRrll\EHT 1\NU CHRI~ B.~RON: Filty Years
,r family Law: E.soays for St<'phcn Crctney
719
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
Tl_-le Edinburgh Building, Cambridge CB2 SRU, United Kingdon
32 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10013-2473, USA
477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, Australia
Printed in the UK by MPG 8!>1Jb Lid
NVlS
734
677
I
,1-
CHINESE
JOURNAL OF
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INTERNATIONAL LAW
VOLUME IL NO.4
DECEMBER2012
Chinese Society of International Law
Invitation to Respond to All Papers Published in the journal
Wang Tieya Award and Lecture in Public International Law
Han Depei Award and Lecture ill Private and Economic International Law
CONTENTS
EDITORIAL COMMENTS
The Dynamic Interplay between the Interpreters of Security Council
Resolutions
Sienho Yee
613
ARTICLES
Universal Jurisdiction over Piracy and East Asian Practice
HUANGYao
623
Child Soldiers and the Parameters of International Criminal Law
Nina H. B. ]0rgensen
657
The Ambit of Pactum de Negotiatum in the Management of Shared Fish Stocks:
A Rumble in the Jungle
Bj0rn Kunoy
689
COMMENTS
Fisheries in the South China Sea: A Centrifugal or Centripetal Force?
Erik Franckx
727
How Coastal States Claim Maritime Geographic Features: Legal Clarity or
Conundrum?
ZOU Keyuan
749
The Issue of Safety of Media Professionals and Human Rights Defenders in the
Jurisprudence of the UN Human Rights Conunittee
Dimitris Xenos
767
The Treaty of Amity and Cooperation in Southeast Asia: The Issue of
Non-Intervention and its Accession by Australia and the USA
Danid Seah
785
BOOK REVIEWS
Reimagining Child Soldiers in International Law and Policy
823
Non-discrimination in the World Trade Organization: The Rules ~d
Exceptions
827
NYlS
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BLS
COLUMBIA HUMAN RIGHTS LAW REVIEW
Fall2012
Vol. 44, No. 1
CONTENTS
ARTICLES
Dating the State: The Moral Hazards of Winning Gay Rights
Katherine Franke .............................................................................. 1
How Terror Transformed Federal Prison: Communication
Management Units
David M. Shapiro ............................................................................ 47
Changing Paradigms: Mental Capacity, Legal Capacity,
Guardianship, and Beyond
Kristin Booth Glen .......................................................................... 93
Rights for the Landless: Comparing Approaches to Historical
Injustice in Brazil and South Africa
Taylor Reeves Dalton .................................................................... 171
NOTES
The Scalpel and the Ax: Federal Review of Tribal Decisions in the
Interest of Tribal Sovereignty
Amy Conners .................................................................................. 199
Redacting the Constitution: Securing Bruton's Confrontation
Protections for a Codefendant During Non-Evidentiary Counsel
Commentary
Jason Portwood Hipp .................................................................... 259
II
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'NYLS
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,Drs
NY
Columbia Journal of Asian Law
Volume 25, Number 2
Summer 2012
CONTENTS
ARTICLES
The People's Regulation:
Citizens and Implementation of Law in China
Benjamin van Rooij
n6
Lifting the Veil of Words:
An Analysis of the Efficacy of Chinese Takeover Laws and the Road to a
"Harmonious Society"
Charlie Xiao-chuan W eng
180
Speech, Structure, and Behavior on the Supreme Court oflndia
Abhinav Chandrachud
222
Navigating the Shoals of Joint Infringement, Indirect Infringement, and
Territoriality Doctrines:
A Comparative Analysis of Chinese and American Patent Laws
Patrick E. King, Timothy T. Lau, & Gautam V. Kene
275
NOTE
Forgiven and Forgotten:
The Republic of China in the United Nations War Crimes Commission
Wen-Wei Lai
306
:NYLS
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The Columbia Journal
of European Law
VOL. IS
N0.3
Summer 2012
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ARTICLES
THE REALITY OF ED-CONFORMITY REVIEW IN FRANCE
THE WESTERN SAHARA DISPUTE: ACASE FOR THE ECJ?
UNION IN EUROPE: CONSTITUTIONAL PHILOSOPHY
AND THE SCHUMAN DECLARATION, MAY 9, 1950
PUBLIC SERVICE PARTNERSHIPS AS INSTRUMENTS
OF PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT IN THE EUROPEAN UNION
Juscelino F. Co/ares
369
Armin Steinbach
415
C.M.A. Me Cauliff
441
Christopher H. Bovis
473
CASE LAW
Case C-272/09 P, KME Gennany, KME France SAS and KME Italy SpA v. European
Commission, Case C-38611 0 P, Chalkor AE Epexergasias Metal! on v. European Commission
and Case C-389/10 P, KME Germany, KME France SAS and KME Italy SpA v. European
Commission of 8 December 2011, NYR
519
NYLS
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COLUMBIA JOURNAL
OF
TRANSNATIONAL LAW
81:8
Founded by Wolfgang G. Friedmann
Vol. 51
2012
No.1
FRIEDMANN MEMORIAL AWARD ADDRESS
M CherifBassiouni
1
ARTICLES
How Serious are International Crimes? The Gravity Problem in
International Criminal Law
Margaret M deGuzman
18
The Eichmann Case and the Invention of the Witness-Driven Atrocity
Trial
Stephan Landsman
69
NOTES
Securities Fraud in Singapore: China and the Challenge of
Deterrence
Paul Michael Jindra
120
Foreign Governments in Contempt? The Case for Limiting the
Contempt Power Under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act
Adam J DiClemente 177
The Jurisdiction ofinvestment Treaty Tribunals over Investors'
Human Rights Claims: The Case Against Roussalis v.
Romania
Pqula F. Henin
BOOKS RECEIVED
224
272
2012 ·VOLUME 37
rJ0·4
J\JYLS
COMMUNICATIONS THE EUROPEAN
JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION RESEARCH
Contents
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Editorial
Friedrich Krotz
Looking back, looking forward -
323
Articles
Rami Al-Sayed, Barrie Gunter
How much sex is there in soap operas on British TV?- 329
Nicholas David Bowman, Sven iaeckel, Leyla Dogruel
A question of morality? The influence of moral salience and nationality on
media preferences- 345
Tim Smits, Heidi Vandebosch
Endorsing children's appetite for healthy foods: Celebrity versus noncelebrity spokes characters- 371
Manuel Puppis
Between independence and autonomous adaptation: The Europeanization
television regulation in non-EU member states- 393
Book Reviews
Daniel Biltereyst
Hetsroni, A. (Ed.) (2011). Reality television: Merging the global and the local.
New York: Nova Science Publishers. 295 pp.- 417
Yves Pepermans, Muhammad Siddique
Hansen, A. (2010). Environment, media and communication. London & New
York: Routledge. 235 pp.- 419
Richard N. van Eck
Poels, K., & Mallie!, S. (Eds.) (2011). Vice city virtue: Moral issues in digital
game play. Leuven: Acco. 352 pp.- 421
Herman Wasserman
Brichta, M. K. (2011). 'Love it or loathe it': Audience responses to tabloids in the
UK and Germany. Bielefeld: Transcript. 293 pp.- 425
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COMPARATIVE LABOR LAW & POLICY JOURNAL
Volume 34, Number 1
-NYLS
.BlS
Fall2012
Introduction: Precarious Work and Human Rights
Einat Albin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1
The Legal Determinants of Precariousness in Personal
Work Relations: A European Perspective
Nicola Kountouris... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
21
A Quid Pro Quo in Temporary Agency Work:
Abolishing Restrictions and Establishing Equal
Treatment-Lessons to Be Learned from European
and German Labor 'Law?
Bernd Waas...............................
47
The Principle of Proportionality in Labor Law and Its
Impact on Precarious Workers
Guy Davidov. .. . . . . . . . .. . . . . .. .. . . . . .. . .. .
63
The Human Right to Livelihood: Recognizing the Right
to Be Human
Kamala Sankaran . . . . . .. .. .. . .. .. . .. . .. . . . .
81
Precarious Migrant Status and Precarious Employment:
The Paradox of International Rights for Migrant
Workers
Judy Fudge. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
95
Human Rights for Precarious Workers: The Legislative
Precariousness of Domestic Labor
Virginia Mantouvalou . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . .. .
133
New Frontiers of Regulation: Domestic Work, Working
Conditions, and the Holistic Assessment of
Nonstandard Work Norms
Deirdre McCann ....................... , ..
167
Human Rights and the Multiple Dimensions of
Precarious Work
Einat Albin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
193
Human Rights and Labor Rights: Why Don't the Two
Tracks Meet?
Guy Mundlak .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..
217
!
II
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1'
I
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NYLS
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Comparative Politics
Volume 45 Number 2 January 2013
Contents
Parties, Ethnicity, and Voting in African Elections
Barak D. Hoffman and James D. Long
127
Protesting and Policing in a Multi ethnic Authoritarian State:
Evidence from Ethiopia
Leonardo R. Arriola
147
Economic Voting in an Era of Non-Crisis:
The Changing Electoral Agenda in Latin America, 1982-2010
Matthew M. Singer
169
Regime Transition and Attitude toward Regime:
The Latin American Gender Gap in Support for Democracy
Lee Demetrius Walker and Genevieve Kehoe
187
Partisan Strategy and Path Dependence:
The Post-War Emergence of Health Systems in the UK and Sweden
Timothy Hicks
207
What Motivates You? The Relationship between
Preferences for Redistribution and Attitudes toward Immigration
Patrick Emmenegger and Robert Klemmensen
227
Abstracts
247
CUN¥
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Content
NYLS
7 The world this week
39
leaders
11 Our American endorsement
Which one?
12 Corporate governance
in Japan
Olympian depths
13 Bangladesh
Out of the basket
14 Myanmar's ethnic
cleansing
No place like home
Letters
16 On immigration,
textbooks, Ayn Rand,
voting
Briefing
23 Bangladesh and
development
The path through the
fields
Volume 405 Number 8809
First published in SeptemberU'43
United States
27 Hurricane Sandy
Wild is the wind
28 Swing states: a round-up
The road to 270
29 Battling for the House
The no-wave election
30 The ground war
Knock, knock
32 The cyberwar
Deus ex machina
32 Voices from the campaign
Heard on the trail
33 Ballot measures
Land of the freer?
36 LeXington
The price of hubris
to take part in "a severe rontest b$Veen
intelligence, wfrich pressesj01ward, and
an unworthy, timid ignorance obstructing .
ourprogress. •
Editorial offices in London and also:
Atlanta, Beijing, Berlin, Brussels, Cairo,
Chicago, Hong Kong,Johanrt~sburg, Los Angeles,
Mexico City, Moscow, New Delhi, New York, Paris,
San Fraru;isco, Silo Paulo, Singapore, Tokyo,
Washington DC
3
11111
The Americas
37 Reform in MeXico
Labour pains
38 Brazil's intellectual
property
Owning ideas
38 News in Cuba
Winds of change
40
40
41
41
42
44
Asia
Myanmar's parliament
Power grab
Damming the Mekong
River elegy
Australia in Asia
What's Strine for" Asian
century"?
Terrorism in Indonesia
Going underground
Indian politics
Shuffled, not stirred
Forced labour in India
Toil and trouble
Banyan
Myanmar's cruel history
China
45 China's ruling families
Riches exposed
46 University exams
Fighting for privilege
Middle East and Africa
47 The Swahili coast
Contagion of discontent
48 Elephant poaching
Brought to tusk
48 Rwandanjustice
Fairness on trial
49 Iraq's oil
The Kurdish opening
50 Syria's civil war
Nowhere to run
so Israeli media
Wapping in the Holy Land
Europe
51 Russia's president
Vladimir the victor
52 Lithuania
Leftward lurch
52 Turkey's Syriacs
An Aramaic outpost
54 The Netherlands
Same old Dutch
54 Greek taxation
A national sport no more
55 French competitiveness
Spare the shock treatment
56 Charlemagne
Bribesville TI
» Contents continues overleaf
4
57 The Heseltine report
Tarzanomics in the age
of Dave
58 The James Bond question
Shaken, stirred and
confused
59 Bagehot
Agentler whipping
International
61 Unmanned aerial vehicles
Death from afar
62 Digital copyright
Pick a book
62 Pain and pills
Grim and bear it
New York v Argentina
75 Deforestation in Sarawak
Logging and HSBC
76 Free exchange
Corporate giants
Science and technology
79 Tsunamis in Lake Geneva
Lake monsters
80 3D printing
Athird-world dimension
81 Microbes as a cure
Bugs in the system
81 Fish farming
High-tech breeders
82 Epigenetics and health
Grandma's curse
Business
63 State capitalism
Big Brother is back
64 Javan's boardrooms
Scrutiny? No, thanks
65 Disney buys Lucasfilm
Wishing upon a Death Star
66 Penguin'sfuture
Waddling down the aisle
66 Fonterra
Land of milk and money
67 Anglo American's future
Cynthia Carroll leaves
67 Lessons from TED
The virtue of letting go
68 Schumpeter
Corporate burlesque
Finance and economics
71 Corporate savings
Dead money
72 Hong Kong property
•·. Radi~altransparelltyThe case
· f~rs~tippingawaytheseyecy
surroun<fi n9 .~ r_ms' fi 1111 nce.s:
Sc~umve~er,page68. Why .
~a~-~!les~_-board(QO~~::neecl
Taxing tinies
72 Investment banking
UBSswingstheaxe
73 Buttonwood
Guaranteed pensions
74 Zippy economies
The fastest growers ever
83
84
84
85
85
Books and arts
The revolution in Iran
In with the madding crowd
British diary-writing
Bulldog heart
Richard Burton's diaries
Thoughtful thespian
TomWo!fe
Miami vice
Ann Richards
Bush's scourge
86 American financial
disasters
Nation of deadbeats
86 Jez Butterworth
After "Jerusalem"
92 Economic and financial
indicators
Statistics on 42
economies, plus a closer
look at our commodities
index
Obituary
94 Sylvia Kristel
The body beautiful
An Economist Group business
mot~ outsiders: leader, pa~e 12
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is printed on papersourcro
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Ethics
An International journal of Social,
Politica~
and Legal Philosophy
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VOLUME 123
1
OCTOBER 2012
NUMBER 1
Editorial
by Henry S. Richardson
ARTICLES
9
The Objectivity of Ethics and the Unity of Practical Reason
32
Backing Away from Libertarian Self-Ownership
61
Trustworthiness
86
Vague Projects and the Puzzle of the Self-Torturer
by Katarzyna de Lazari-Radek and Peter Singer
by David Sobel
by Karen jones
by Sergio Tenenbaum and Diana Rajfman
DISCUSSIONS
113
Moral Status and the Direction of Duties
129
Action Individuation and Deontic Cycling
by Stephen C. Makin
137
Justin Broackes, ed., Iris Murdoch, Philosopher: A Collection ofEssays
Reviewed by Nancy E. Snow
Scott A Davison, On the Intrinsic Value ofEverything
Reviewed by Erik J Wielenberg
James J. DiCenso, Kant, Religion, and Politics
Reviewed by Rob Gressis
Evan Fox-Decent, SIYVereignt:y's Promise: The State as Fiduciary
Reviewed by Matthew Lister
Ruth W. Grant, Strings Attached: Untangling the Ethics of Incentives
Reviewed by Robert Mayer
Nicole Hassoun, Globalization, and Global justice: Shrinking Distance,
by Simon Ciibulea May
BOOK REVIEWS
141
146
150
154
158
Expanding Obligations
Reviewed by Helena de Bres
162
John F. Horty, &asons as Defaults
Reviewed by Mark Schroeder
167
174
179
Philip Kitcher, The Ethical Project
Reviewed by William J FitzPatrick
David Phillips, Sidgwickian Ethics
Reviewed by Bart Schultz
Douglas Portmore, Commonsense Consequentialism: Wherein Morality Meets
Rationality
183
188
193
Reviewed by Frances Howard-Snyder
Toni R0nnow-Rasmussen, Personal Value
Reviewed by Christian Coons
John Tomasi, Free Market Fairness
Reviewed by jan Narveson
Notes on Contributors
NYLS
.·Its
2012 Volume 33 Issue
11
European Competition Law
Review
ISSN: 0144-3054
Table of Contents
Articles
HETHAM HANI ABU KARKY
Consumer Protection in Jordan: What do we Have and What do we Need?
489
Consumer rights aints to ensure the corummer welfare, In Jordan some of these rights are protected by
the Industry and trade Law and some ofthem-unfortunately-<qe not! Here is a quick review of the
Industry and Trade Law articles which related to the consmner right:; and try to specify what we need
in Jordan to enhance the consumer welfare.
JOAQUIM CAIMOTO DUARTE AND
TANIA LuiSA FARIA
The New Portuguese Competition Act: a Leap Forward or a Change Just for
Things to Remain the Same? 492
This article addresses the most significant changes brought about by the new Portuguese Competition
Act, which entered into force inJuly2012. We will contextualise the drafting of the law and specifically
comment on the amendments to the meiger control framework, the new powers within antitru...<rt
proceedings and sector inquiries, as well as the dl.3llges concerning judicial appeals.
ZJAAKIITAR
Distant Selling, E-Commerce and Company Liability 497
The EUI"Opeall Commission has implemented plans for a "28th regime" of contract law as a harmonising
measure for consumer laws that already exist in EU member countries. Directive 2011/83 is intended
to reduce costs for businesses and provide increased rights to consumers by granting them the
_opportunities to p<u-chase cheaper merchandise.
PEDRO CALLOL
A Practical Guide on How to Deal with Market Share Notification Thresholds:
Risks and Solutions in Multijurisdictional Transactions 510
Market share thresholds for merger control have traditionally been a source of concern becaUse of the
difficulties associated with verifying whether or not a filing is requi_rcd at the early stages of an M&A
transaction. This paper analyses the evolution of the law in connection with this issue; tbe national
experiences of Spain, Portugal and the United Kingdom, and the optimal approach, based on the
practitioners' experience, to tackle these matters and eventually come up with the best possible solutions.
LUKE DANAGHER
The Criminalisation of Cartels: A European and Trans-Atlantic
Perspective 522
This article aims to critically discuss the extent to which cartels have become a criminal activity. In
doing so, attention will be paid to the relative competition provisions of the United States, the European
Union, the United Kingdom and Germany.
VANESSA HUDSON
Understanding the Direction ofEU Competition Law: An Analysis based on
Merger Regulation in tbe EU and US 526
This piece analyses whether EU Competition Law is converging with US Antitrust Law by considering
the direction ofEU Merger law. Examining the aftermath of the GE/Honcywell decision and the
snbsequent changes to EU merger law it finds the criticisms received influenced regulatory and theoretical
changes. Thns this piece finds that within merger Jaw a convergence of two systems can be seen, as the
EU embraces Chicago school theories of competition law and places a greater focns upon economic
considerations.
NAGY, CSONGOR ISTVAN
Commitments as Surrogates of Civil Redress in Competition Law: tbe
Hungarian Perspe;ctive 531
This paper analyses and evaluates the Hungarian Competition Office's private enforcement generating
decisional practice on couunitinents. It pertains to this practice that commitments often remedy the
detrimental consequences ,of competition violations and provide cnmpetlSation for the victims. The paper
examines what role commitment procedures could have in promoting competition law's private
enforcement.
DR MAG. MARIE-THERESE RICHTER
The Settlement Procedure in the Context oftbe Enforcement Tools of European
Competition Law-A Comparison @d Impact Analysis 537
This paper will analyse the inteqllay between the "traditional" enforcement tools and. the newly established
settlement procedure and compare them. It will examine how the different tools influence each other
and differ from each other.
Book Reviews
543
National Reports
European Institutions
MERGER REGULATIONS
Prior notifications of concentrations N-173
Czech Republic
GENERAL
Legislative reform
Denmark
N-174
ANTI-COMPETITIVE PRACTICES
Danish competition and consumer authority N-176
!
Greece
Netherlands
ABUSE OF DOMINANT POSITION
Competition Commission Decision N-176
ANTI-COMPETITIVE AGREEMENTS
N-178
Competition Authority
I
2013 Volume 34 Issue 1
ISSN: 0144-3054
European Competition Law
Review
NYLS
Table of Contents
Articles
ADRJAN BROWN AND MORRJS
SCHONBERG
Widening the Net: The General Court Extends the Principle of Successor
Liability in EU Competition Law I
Given that there may often be a significant time-lag between the end of a cartel and the date it is actually
penalised by the European Commission, the rules governing succession to liability for EU competition
law infringements have proven significant in practice: HoweVer, two recent General Court judgments
have arguably extended the scope of succession to breaking point. This article provides an overview of
the existing principles and then considers the judgments and the potential problems they raise.
FREDiiRJC MANIN, RAINER VELTE,
GUSTAF DUHS AND GCN<;:ALO
ANASTACIO
SINEAD BREATHNACH
Competition Law Compliance across Europe: a Multi-jurisdictional
Challenge 6
The authors summarise some key differences in relation to competition law compliance in France,
Germany, the United Kingdom <ind at EU level. The aim is to identify the pitfalls and to provide food
for thought to companies and their advisers when considering how to assess risk and maximise the
effectiveness of such programmes ·for multi-national or global businesses.
Sweetening the Carrot: The Role of Leniency Programmes in the Fight against
Cartels 12
Discovering and dismantling cartels is quite an arduous ta~k and in order to assist in this endeavour
many jurisdictions have introduced corporate leniency programmes. The aim of these programmes is
to encourage the self-reporting of anti-competitive activity by cartel members and although first introduced
in the United States, leniency.programmes are now in place in the European Union and the majority of
its Member States, including Ireland.
ROB VANDERLAAN
About dogs and barking: Jersey Competition Regulatory Authority Decision
C793/11 Jersey Telecom Limited 17
In February 2012, the Jersey Competition Regulatory Authority issued its first decision concluding that
there had been an infringement ofart.8(1) of the Competition (Jersey) Law 2005. In this article we
discuss various aspects in relation to the fine and the link between competition law in Jersey and the
European Union.
DR NIKOLAOS E. ZEVGOLIS
Resale Price Maintenance (RPM) in European Competition Law: Legal
certainty Versus Economic theory? 25
Basic principle of European competition law is that every enterprise must define independently, i.e.
autonomously, its trade (economic) policy. Consequently, for reasons oflegal certainty only a modification
of the per se approach for RPM and in the form of exemption could be accepted, recognising at the same
time that systematic economic analysis is necessary for the rationalisation of competition law.
KAI H0SCHELRATH, ULRJC!-1
LAITENBERGER AND FLORJAN
SMUDA
Cartel Enforcement in the European Union: Determinants of the Duration of
Investigations 33
We provide an empirical assessment of EC cartel enforcement decisions between 2000 _and 2011.
Following an initial characterisation of our dataset, we especially investigate the determinants of the
duration of cartel investigations. We are able to identifY_ several key drivers of investigation length such
as the-Commission's speed of cartel detection, the type of cartel agreement, the affected industry or the
existence of a chief witness.
Analysis
ELISABETTA ROTONDO
The Application of the Proposed European Standardisation Regulation in
Practice 40
On September 11, 2012, the European Parliament adopted the final text of the proposed European
Standardisation Regulation. The Standardisation Regulation identifies parameters within which industry,
public authorities and other interested parties can voluntarily set standards in order to reduce tedmical
h8rriPr:: to CT0<:s-hon'leT trade_ This will be achieved by harmonising national and often conflicting
standards policies in different Member States for certain areas of public procurement.
DR N. AYSE ODMAN BOZTOSUN
European Competition Law: The linpa~f of the Commission's Guidance on
Article 102 44
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2012 Volume 34 Issue
12
ISSN: 0142-0461
European Intellectual
Property Review
Table of Contents
Opinions
JASON HAYNES
Critically Reconceptualising the United Kingdom's Fair Dealing Exception to
Copyright Infringement in Light of the Government's Most Recent Proposals
for Reform and Lessons Learnt from Civil Law Countries 811
The current state of the fair dealing defence in the United Kingdom does not provide an appropriate
basis for learning and the promotion of an innovative economy in the 21st century. Indeed, the defence,
given its much publicised- inconsistency and "lock down on the individual" and not the peer group,
operates unfairly and should thus be amended, in light of the changes proposed in the Government's
most recent intellectual property consultation paper, so as to "avoid piggy-backing" on much-needed
developments in this area.
Articles
KARlNA O'ROURKE
Integrity on the Web
815
This article examines how the integrity right, as provided for· in the UK, can potentially be infringed in
an online environment, where web users can manipulate works of others as a basis for their own creations.
It is argued that there needs to be balance between the rights of authors and of users in the creation of
potentially valuable expression.
TSffiMANGA KONGOLO
Towards an International Legal Instrument on Exceptions and Limitations to
Copyright for Visually Impaired Persons/Persons with Print Disabilities:
Current International Negotiations 823
Negotiations taking place at the Standing Committee on Copyright and Related Rights (SCCR) of the
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) on exceptions and limitations to copyright for visually
impaired persons/persons with print disabilities are progressing well. Several proposals from the following
countries/groups have been on the table of negotiations: Brazil, Ecuador and Paraguay, endorsed by
Mexico, the United States, the European Union and the African Group; and the Proposal of the Chair,
called the draft international instrument on exceptions and limitations to copyright for visually impaired
persons/persons with print disabilities, which is at the final stage of negotiations at the SCCR. Yet the
legal nature of the instrument to be adopted is hitherto unknown. As proposed by the SCCR, the General
Assembly may decide in an extraordinary session whether or not to convene a Diplomatic Conference
in 2013 to adopt this instrument..
WEI-LIN WANG
A Stndy on Conflicts of Interest in Academia-Industry Co-operation: The
Defence for and Modifications to tbe Bayh-Do!e Act (Part 1) 834
Although it is believed that the Bayh-Dole Act has had positive influences on the development of
technology and the economy, there are at least two criticisms regarding its side effects: (I) by allowing
universities to retain patent rights and encouraging technology transfer to private industry, the Bayh-Dole
Act creates or aggravates conflicts of interest; alld (2) that patenting research results will transform
knowledge into personal property, and hence limit the free dissemination of knowledge. The first part
of this article will refer to various surveys demonstrating that the concerns regarding conflicts of interest
may be exaggerated, and provides for resolutions for easing the problem.
DRANAN SHAWQ!YOUNES
Trade Marks and Domain Names: Exploring the Inadequacy of Existing
Protection for the Economic Value of Trade Marks 847
This article concerns the extent to which investments made by trade mark proprietors and domain name
holders into their assets are protected by law. The article clarifies obstacles that prevent cyberspace
being a seCure environment for the investment under investigation. The article demonstrates the need
for reviewing the related provisions, such as trade mark laws and the UDRP.
1\IYL'!
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2012 Volume 34 Issue
12
ISSN: 0142-0461
PING-HSUN (QUINCY) CHEN
European Intellectual
Property Review
Table of Contents
China as a Technology Exporter: A Question Mark after the Third Amendment
ofthe China Patent Law in 2009 · 853 ··
This article examines the latest-Change in the Chinese patent law in tenus of whether the new patent law
will encourage technology transfer from China to foreign countries. Artic;les 10 and 20 of the new patent
law are particularly discussed because they relate to.-fOi"eign pateut "filing of a Chi:D.a~made ID.vention.
The new patent law claims to lift the control over fore_ign patent filing and patent title transfer. Those
changes could lead to an open door for technology export However, after investigating 'the laws regulating
teclmology export, this article concludes that because the Chinese Government still controls technology
export to foreign entities and the patent law itself does not really lift the control over foreign patent
filing, the latest amended Chinese patent law cannot tralls'form China into a country of technology export
Comments
YINHARNLEE
Play Again? Revisiting the Case for Copyright Protection ofGameplay in
Videogames 865
Recent controversies within the videogame industry have highlighted the importance of a copyright
framework which takes into consideration the gameplay aspect ofvideogames as well as their graphics,
sounds and underlying computer code, as the perceived lack of recourse for developers whose gameplay
has been "cloned" by opportunistic competitors is seen as detrimental to the creative health Of the
indUstry. However, the establishment of such; a framework appears to be precluded by the decision of
both the first instance and appellate courts in Nova Productions Ltd v Mazooma Games Ltd. 1bis article
examines the arguments for and against copyright protection of gameplay, and offers an alternative
reading of the decision which leaves room for-~e possibility Of such protection.
'
JAMES GREEN
Apotex Inc v AstraZeneca Inc: IP Experts Take the Plunge into the Hot
Tub 874
Concurrent expert evidence is becoming a common feature of litigation in many jurisdictions, including
Canada. Canada's Federal Court has allowed- for adverse expert witnesses to testify concurrently since
2010, but only recently was this procedure ·usedin.an _intellectual property case. This is an interesting
and important development, but uncertainty~ about how and when the Federal Court's concurrent
evidence procedure will be employed. The eXperience of courts in other jurisdictions provides guidance
as to relevant factors the Federal Court should consider-when contemplating invoking its concurrent
expert evidence procedures in future cases.
PESSI HONKASALO AND SANNA
KAISTINEN
Smiley Faced Down: the FinniSh Supreme Administrative Court decides that
Emoticon cannot be Trade Marked 877
This is a conunent on the Finnish Supreme Acirrrini~tr.a~ve Court judgment in Vzestinniin Keskusliitto
ry v Mattila which decided that a trade mark consisting~ of punctuation marks:) should not be registered
because of the absence of distinctive character and the.need to preserve the right of competitors to use
a descriptive sign.
JOHN A. TESSENSOHN
Pink Lady Publicity Rights PursuedobySupreme Court of Japan
879
This landmark Supreme Court of Japan deCision elaborated on the scope of protection of publicity rights
of celebrities in Japan when it dismissed the clairh Of One of the most famous pop idols in Japan's
pantheon of entertainment culture, Pink ~ady, the mid-1970s Japanese pop phenometion. The Supreme
Court rejected the claim of damages ani;l injunction-,asserted by the plaintiffs against the publishers of
a magazine article which used their ~age_without.p~ission when it discussed a weight-loss method
using dance routines to the duo's songs.
· -- --
Book Reviews
884
DECEMBER 2012 • VOLUME 42 • PAGES 1435-1566
NYLS
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Family Law
•
Privacy and publicity in family law: their eternal
tension 1463
•
International relocation, care arrangements and case
taxonomy 1478
•
Costs against local authorities in care proceedings:
ReT 1484
•
The costs allowance 'revolution' in proceedings for
financial relief 1491
•
Arbitration in Family Financial Proceedings: the IFLA
Scheme: Part 2 1496
•
Gow v Grant leads the way towards financial rights for
cohabitants I 505
•
Restrictions on disclosure: public interest immunity and
the rights of the parties: Re J IS 12
•
Doing the maths: costs orders in the family
court 1518
•
Adoption: a step forward?
•
The developments in section 38(6) directions and
instruction of experts 1525
•
Standard Directions in Hague Convention cases
involving Cafcass High Court team 1529
•
Dispute Resolution: Get real: move on
•
Resolution News
•
FLBA News
1537
•
journa/CPD
1553
1536
1520
1530
CUNY
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Kf:NDERS
T .A.'I;1<7
~M.
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Slmmlifiee .
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FORDHAM
NYLS
•CUNV
11:9
INTERNATIONAL
LAW JOURNAL
VOLUME35
NOVEMBER 2012
No.6
CONTENTS
SPECIAL REMARKS
A CONVERSATION WITH UNITED STATES SENATOR
JIM WEBB .............................................................................................................. Jim Webb 1593
ARTICLE
ADVANCING HUMAN RIGHTS AND EQUALITY: AsSESSING THE ROLE
OF COMMISSIONS IN THE UNITED KINGDOM AND IRELAND ............................ Colin Harvey 1615
Sarah Spencer
NOTES
THE US-RUSSIAN CHILD ADOPTION AGREEMENT:
AN END TO FAILED ADOPTIONS? ................................................................... Cheryl L. Allen 1690
A STEP IN THE WRONG DIRECTION: INCREASING RESTRICTIONS
ON FOREIGN RURAL LAND ACQUISITION IN BRAZIL ....................................... jessica Ball17 43
EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION FACED BY THE IMMIGRANT WORKER:
A LESSON FROM THE UNITED STATES AND SOUTH AMERICA ................ Sean M. Heneghan 1780
THIS LAND IS MY LAND: PROTECTING THE SECURITY OF
TENURE IN POST-EARTHQUAKE HAITI ..................................................... Rebecca lwerks 1824
RETAKING THE HELM AGAINST INTERNATIONAL BRIBERY: THE
FACILITATING PAYMENTS EXCEPTION AND SOVEREIGN DOMINANCE ............... Tanya Rolo 1884
NYLS
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BLS
FOREIGN
AFFAIRS
January/February 2013 · Volume 92, Number 1
2
Turkey's Moment
A Conversation With Abdullah Gul
Jonathan Tepperman
0
0
<
"
'"
"
0
.;
0
8
The Fall and Rise of the West
Why America and Europe Will Emerge Stronger From the
Financial Crisis
Roger C. Altman
14
Do Less Harm
0
0
""
w
Protecting and Compensating Civilians in War
Sarah Holewinski
January/February 2013
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NYLS
FOREIGN
AFFAIRS
-
january/February 2013 · Volume 92, Number 1
22
Can America Be Fixed?
The New Crisis of Democracy
Fareed Zakaria
The Life of the Party
34
The Post-Democratic Future Begins in China
Eric X. Li
47
Democratize or Die
Why China's Communists Face Reform or Revolution
Yasheng Huang
The Mirage of the Arab Spring
55
Deal With the Region You Have, Not the Region You Want
Seth G. Jones
The Promise of the Arab Spring
64
In Political Development, No Gain Without Pain
Sheri Berman
The End of the Age of Petraeus
75
The Rise and Fall of Counterinsurgency
Fred Kaplan
Barak's Last Battle
91
An Israeli Lion in Winter
Jonathan Tepperman
'
january/February 2013
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FOREIGN
AFFAIRS
January/February 2013 · Volume 92, Number 1
105
Getting to Yes With Iran
The Challenges of Coercive Diplomacy
Robert Jervis
116
Pull Back
The Case for a Less Activist Foreign Policy
Barry R. Posen
Lean Forward
130
In Defense of American Engagement
Stephen G. Brooks, G. John Ikenberry, and William C. Wohlforth
143
Rebooting Republican Foreign Policy
Needed: Less Fox, More Foxes
Daniel W Drezner
America's Misguided Approach to Social Welfare
How the Country Could Get More for Less
Kimberly J Morgan
ON FOREIGNAFFAIRS.COM
,.. Michael Eisenstadt
and David Pollock on
why the U.S.-Israeli
relationship offers
Amo.ril"".:Jo ""'"''""" h .............. .Ja....
1>- Javier Corrales on
how Hugo Chavez's
socialist economic
policies have done more
.,..Jerome Alan Cohen
on the surprising
progress China's legal
system has made in
153
NYLS
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FOREIGN
AFFAIRS
January/February 2013 . Volume 92, Number 1
": "' --- '~''''''·"- "'-''~"'"'"~-~- ;WiJ .,.'!f "~"i_''i.,,'(O''"'"{'f"'' >:"0f,.r:{cY""lJ ~-:
~¥~-:~;,~{-~;~~-ii$~
~j::~t~~W¥~!=~~~_,: ~ _
The Volcker Way
166
Lessons From the Last Great Hero of Modern Finance
Austan Goolsbee
172
The Totalitarian Temptation
Liberalism's Enemies, Then and Now
Andrew Nagorski
177
Smart Shift
A Response to "The Problem With the Pivot"
Shawn Brimley and Ely Ratner
182
Recent Books
"Foreign Affairs ... w£ll tolerate wide differences of opinion. Its articles will not represent any consensus of
beliefs. What is demanded of them is that they shall be competent and well informed, representing honest
opinions seriously held and convincingly expressed. ... It does not accept responsibility for the views in any
articles, signed or unsigned, which appear in its pages. What it does accept is the responsibility for giving
them a chance to appear."
Archibald Cary Coolidge, Founding Editor
Volume 1, Number 1 • September 1922
January/February 2013
THE WISDOM OF THE SMART CROWD
We asked the 2012 Global Thinkers to weigh in on the big questions of the year. Some of the highlights ...
Top 5Books Recommended by FP's Global Thinkers
'' ," ---)i~~~-ij~~!f ', nm.l'lWI:IIlkl~l-mun
TJ:YrNKING,
FA
··••.•WHY!···•·.
~~!IP~~
s·'r;:sr:-o-w
I .· ·: --::-:-_--:C::,;~o~; .,_ :.\(·'J·:·,,
fl!IT
DANIEL
······~~~l.t •.•1.
KAHNEMAN
1.
Thinkin&
Fast and
Slow, by
Daniel
~~~?l_i:±~,~-~~,,
·z.SteveJobs,
3.Why
by Walter
Isaacson
Nations Fail,
Kahneman
byDaron
Acemoglu
and James
Robinson
Jhe best muse for these times is...
Jf~#i'*llll-for his tbeory of moral
4- The Better
Angels of Our
Nature, by
Steven Pinker
China is...
A problem that can be managed.
-Robert Kagan
sentiments and his balanced view of
the moral effects of capitalism.
-Jonathan Haidt
An unclear, unstable, and uncertain
Clio, Muse of history. We should
still learn fr:om the past. -Radoslaw
Sikorski
At once a potential threat and a
potential resource and ally. -Moncef
society. -Ai Weiwei
Marzouki
Women who are changing the
world by refusing to accept historical
boundaries. -Melinda Gates
Loud music on the iPhone. -Daron
ilcemoglu
Different from what you think. -Kai~
FuLee
The year that most resembles
2012is...
·
Dear American president,
in the next four years please...
Make decisions. -Sebastian Thrun
Get rid of secret laws . ·.;::_liP,~er:"...
Dingledine
Work for global peace, "'<''>'Y"> ~
development. -Joyce
Be a global leader.
- Kiyoshi Kurokawa
1790. The French Revolution had
started the year before. -NadimMatta
1922, when either democracy or
totalitarianism could still prevail in the
world. -Beth NoveCk
1969, the year after the events.
-Slavoj Zizek
1978 Gust a year prior to the Iranian
revolution). -Mohammad Fahad al~
Qahtani
DECEMJ!ER 2012
5
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VOLUME 44
2012
NUMBER 3
THE GEORGE
WASHINGTON
INTERNATIONAL
LAW REVIEW
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ARTICLES
Is "Defamation of Religions" Passe?
The United Nations, Organisation of
Islamic Cooperation, and Islamic State
Practices: Lessons from Pakistan
431
]avaid Rehman &
Stephanie E. Berry
ICESCR Minimum Core Obligations
and Investment: Recasting the NonExpropriation Compensation Model
during Financial Crises
4 73
Diane A. Desierto
ESSAY
Witness Intimidation in International
Trials: Balancing the Need for
Protection against the Rights
of the Accused
521
Andrew Trotter
NOTE
"Think You Can Steal Our Caravaggio
and Get Away With It? Think Again."
An Analysis of the Italian Cultural
Property Model
539
Monica R DiFonzo
BOOK NOTES
Customary Justice and the Rule of Law
in War-Torn Societies
573
Regulation of Issuers and Investor
Protection in the US and EU:
A Transatlantic Comparison of the
Basics of Securities and Corporate Law
577
Copyright © 2012 by The George Washington University
j
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GEORGETOWN IMMIGRATION LAW JOURNAL
© 2011 by The Georgetown Immigration Law Journal
VOLUME 25
SUMMER 2011
NUMBER4
CONTENTS
ARTICLES
FOLLOW THE NORTII STAR: CANADA AS A MODEL TO INCREASE THE
INDEPENDENCE, INTEGRITY AND EFFICIENCY OF THE U.S. IMMIGRATION
ADJUDICATION SYSTEM
David C. Koelsch .......................................... 763
RATIONING FAMILY VALUES IN EUROPE AND AMERICA: AN IMMIGRATION
TUG OF WAR BETWEEN STATES AND THEIR SUPRA-NATIONAL
AssociATIONs
Stephen H. Legomsky . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 807
OUT OF THE FIRE AND INTO THE
POT:
THE ERITREAN LIBERATION
MOVEMENT, THE RIGHT TO SELF-DETERMINATION AND THE
0VER-BREADTII OF NORTH AMERICAN IMMIGRATION SECURITY
PROVISIONS
Catherine Bruce, Angus Grant and Catherine Reynolds . . . . . . . . . 859
NOTES
UNACCOMPANIED SHOULD NOT MEAN UNPROTECTED:
THE
INADEQUACIES OF RELIEF FOR UNACCOMPANIED IMMIGRANT MINORS
Maura M. Ooi . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 883
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Human Rights Review
NYLS
Volume 13 · Number 4 · December 2012
Notes on Contributors
Editor-in-Chief's Nota Bene
ARTICLES
From Adjudication to Aftermath: Assessing the ICTY's Goals beyond Prosecution
P.C. McMahon · J.L. Miller 421
An Umbrella With Holes: Respect for Non-Derogable Human Rights During Declared States of Emergency,
1996-2004
D.L. Richards · K.C. Clay 443
Explaining the Failure of Mexico's National Commission of Human Rights (Ombudsman's Office)
after Democratization: Elections, Incentives, and Unaccountability in- the Mexican Senate
J. Finkel 473
BOOK REVIEW ESSAY
Religion in International Relations: Rights and Reality
B.A.J. Rieffer-Flanagan · D.P. Forsythe 497
BOOK REVIEWS
Making Rights a Reality? Disability Rights Activists and Legal Mobilization by Lisa Vanhala
A.W. Blaser 509
Queering the Public Sphere in Mexico and Brazil: Sexual Rights Movements in Emerging Democracies
by Rafael de Ia Dehesa
E. Chamberlain 513
Childism: Confronting Prejudice against Children by Elisabeth Young-Bruehl
517
R. Balockaite
Gender and Culture at the Limit of Rights by Dorothy L. Hodgson, ed.
521
S. Chaban
CUNY
Fly UP