Houston Journal of International Law

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from January 1997
Last Number: June 2019

Houston Journal of International Law
ISSN 0194-1879


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 456

March 22, 1999

  • The right to privacy is coming to the United Kingdom: balancing the individual's right to privacy from the press and the media's right to freedom of expression.

  • Human Rights: Group Defamation, Freedom of Expression and the Law of Nations: What International and Domestic Laws Can Teach the United States.

  • Environmental Management on North America's Borders.

  • January 01, 2000

  • Human rights purposes of the Violence Against Women Act and international law's enhancement of congressional power.

  • How do you know you are at war in the information age?

  • Recognizing foreign tax judgments: an argument for the revocation of the revenue rule.

  • Healing the sacred yoni in the land of Isis: female genital mutilation is banned (again) in Egypt.

  • Combating gray market goods in a global market: comparative analysis of intellectual property laws and recommended strategies.

  • International arbitration and enforcement in U.S. federal courts.

  • December 22, 2001

  • Driving while Mexican: why the Supreme Court must reexamine United States v. Brignoni-Ponce, 422 U.S. 873 (1975).

  • The exit fiction: unconstitutional indefinite detention of deportable aliens.

  • January 01, 2001

  • Foreign forum selection clauses in the federal courts: all in the name of international comity.

  • Limiting states' roles in foreign commerce: teaching old-world dogs New-World tricks.

  • December 22, 2001

  • Should the United States officially recognize the Taliban? the international legal and political considerations.

  • January 01, 2002

  • Patent necessity: intellectual property dilemmas in the biotech domain & treatment equity for developing countries.

  • Cleaning up anti-money laundering strategies: current FATF tactics needlessly violate international law *.

  • The perfect storm: the safe harbor and the directive on data protection.

  • Searching for a level playing field: the internationalization of U.S. securities disclosure rules.

  • Unrest in the European Commission: the changing landscape and politics of international mergers for United States companies.

  • December 22, 2003

  • John R. Brown (1910-1993): the judge who charted the course.

  • January 01, 2003

  • Lessons from the master: the legacy of Judge John R. Brown.

  • Speech in honor of the dedication of the John R. Brown admiralty library at the University of Houston Law Center building.

  • December 22, 2003

  • Admirality judges: flotsam on the sea of maritime law?

  • Arbitration under NAFTA Chapter 11: past, present, and future.

  • Is the United States the world's dumping ground for steel? Recent influxes in steel imports in the United States, the effects, and the possible remedies.

  • January 01, 2005

  • "Equal treaty rights": a response to Professor Paust.

  • Discrimination on the basis of resident status and denial of equal treatment: a reply to Professor Weintraub's response.

  • "Umbrellas" or "building blocks"? Defining international terrorism and transnational organized crime in international law [phi].

  • December 22, 2005

  • Justice under transitional administration: contours and critique of a paradigm φ.

  • Finding the right tool for the job: adequate protection for research tool patents in a global market?

  • Defining international satellite communications as weapons of mass destruction: the first step in a compromise between national sovereignty and the free flow of ideas.

  • Going too far is worse than not going far enough: principle-based accounting standards, international harmonization, and the European paradox.

  • December 22, 2007

  • Recent developments in foreign sovereign immunity and Texas garnishment law: a new threat facing U.S. oil and gas companies.

  • The Alien Torts Statute and the search for energy in difficult political environments.

  • The world of international compliance: what transactional lawyers need to know to perform ethically and responsibly.

  • Fighting corruption in a global economy: transparency initiatives in the oil and gas industry.

  • Cross-border unitization and joint development agreements: an international law perspective.

  • Thou shall not covet thy neighbor's water: a look at the journey both Texas and the Middle East must embark upon to solve the kinks in their water regulation.

  • The war on energy: why the United States and the international community need cohesive energy infrastructure security policy.

  • March 22, 2008

  • Breaking ground without lifting a shovel: Ecuador's plan to leave its oil in the ground.

  • Recent developments in Brazil's oil & gas industry: Brazil appears to be stemming the tide of resource nationalism.

  • The status of the draft Iraq oil and gas law.

  • Status of Russian petroleum legislation.

  • Over the river and (around) the woods to grandma's house we go: long-term firm transmission rights, transmission market power, & gaming strategies in a deregulated energy market - an international comparison.

  • OPEC from myth to reality.

  • March 22, 2004

  • U.S. policy on the enforcement of foreign export restrictions on cultural property & destructive aspects of retention schemes.

  • Post-WTO China and independent judicial review.

  • Charterer's liabilities under the ship time charter.

  • TRIPS compliance: dealing with the consequences of drug patents in India.

  • The wide world of sports is getting wider: a look at drafting foreign players into U.S. professional sports.