Fordham Law School Clinical Professor Paolo Galizzi introduces ILJ’s 2019 symposium issue with an overview of the current debate on the regulation of international trade.
Read MoreWilliam Jannace (Adjunct Professor, Fordham Law School) and Paul Tiffany (Senior Lecturer, Haas School of Business, University of California, Berkeley) propose a strategy for revitalizing the Bretton Woods System.
Read MoreRachel Brewster (Jeffrey and Bettysue Hughes Professor of Law and Co-Director of the Center for International and Comparative Law, Duke University) offers a critique of the Trump Administration’s trade strategy and suggests how the United States could respond more productively to Chinese government infractions.
Read MoreJ. Benton Heath (Acting Assistant Professor of Lawyering, New York University School of Law) argues that the threat posed by national-security objectives to economic law is deeper than the US-China trade conflict and the Trump administration’s strategic use of tariffs.
Read MoreSimon Lester and Huan Zhu of the Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies at the Cato Institute address invocations of national security in GATT/WTO disputes, and propose alternatives to litigation for responding to national security trade restrictions.
Read MoreFordham Law School student Daisy de Wolff explains how the law of the flag complicates US efforts to address intentional oil pollution from seafaring vessels.
Read MoreFordham Law School student Krina Patel criticizes the marital exception to rape law in India and proposes several legal and social reforms.
Read MoreFordham Law School student Savannah Price assesses the status under customary international law of the right to renounce citizenship, and addresses the related topic of dual citizenship.
Read MoreFordham Law School student Ruarri Rogan contends that Malaysia’s exploitative migrant labor policies should subject its exports to sanction under the US countervailing duty statute.
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