Washington University Global Studies Law Review

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from March 2009
Last Number: January 2023

Washington University, School of Law
ISSN 1546-6981


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 352

October 22, 2021

  • COUNTER-TERRORISM LAWS AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN AFRICAN COUNTRIES.

  • COUNTER-TERRORISM LAWS AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN AFRICAN COUNTRIES.

  • FAUX OUTRAGE: COUNTERFEIT DRUGS IN A GLOBALIZING ECONOMY.

  • REEFER REFERENDUM: COMPARING MARIJUANA LAWS ACROSS THE GLOBE.

  • January 01, 2010

  • South Africa's approach to the global human trafficking crisis: an analysis of the proposed legislation and the prospects of implementation.

  • March 22, 2012

  • Be careful what you pay for: awareness raising on trafficking in persons.

  • December 22, 2013

  • Combating human trafficking in Poland: when victims are lost in translation.

  • January 01, 2016

  • Prosecuting human traffickers by mobilizing human rights defenders as victims' advocates.

  • Prosecuting human traffickers by mobilizing human rights defenders as victims' advocates.

  • September 22, 2016

  • Mending the protection and prosecution divide: looking at Saudi Arabia human trafficking flaws and possibilities.

  • January 01, 2018

  • INTERNATIONAL MEGAN'S LAW AND THE IDENTIFIER PROVISION: AN EFFICACY ANALYSIS.

  • March 22, 2018

  • INCONSISTENT TRAFFICKING OBLIGATIONS AND HOW GUYANA GOT CAUGHT IN THE MIDDLE.

  • January 01, 2022

  • A NOTE.

  • December 22, 2015

  • Colorism and the law in Latin America - global perspectives on colorism conference remarks.

  • January 01, 2022

  • INTRODUCTION: PROFESSOR LEILA NADYA SADAT: BRINGING THE WORLD TO WASHULAW AND WASHULAW TO THE WORLD.

  • PATHBREAKER IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND MENTOR A TRIBUTE TO PROFESSOR LEILA NADYA SADAT.

  • WORDS AND CRIMES.

  • THE INDEPENDENT EXPERT REVIEW OF THE ICC: WHAT NEXT FOR COOPERATION?

  • ALICE IN WONDERLAND ATROCITY ACCOUNTABILITY IN THE 21ST CENTURY A WORLD TURNED UPSIDE DOWN.

  • THE ESTABLISHMENT OF AN ANTI-CORRUPTION COURT.

  • THE PLIGHT OF THE ROMA: THE ALMOST-FORGOTTEN ETHNIC GROUP.

  • NUREMBERG AND THE DRAFTING OF THE GENOCIDE CONVENTION.

  • PARLIAMENTARY CONDEMNATIONS OF MASS ATROCITIES AND THE OBLIGATION TO PREVENT GENOCIDE AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY.

  • ACHIEVING ACCOUNTABILITY FOR ATROCITY CRIMES IN AN ERA OF RESISTANCE TO INTERNATIONAL JUSTICE AND HUMAN RIGHTS.

  • March 22, 2022

  • DETERMINATION OF THE U.S. PLEADING FROM THE CIVIL LAW PERSPECTIVE.

  • A FOURTH MODEL OF CONSTITUTIONAL REVIEW? DE FACTO EXECUTIVE SUPREMACY.

  • SCHREMS II: THE EU'S INFLUENCE ON U.S. DATA PROTECTION AND PRIVACY LAWS.

  • THE BANNING OF TIKTOK, AND THE BAN OF FOREIGN SOFTWARE FOR NATIONAL SECURITY PURPOSES.

  • FIGHTING PATENT TROLLS EARLY: LEARNING FROM THE UNITED KINGDOM IN OUR SCRAMBLE TO DETERMINE THE CORRECT PLEADING STANDARDS FOR DIRECT PATENT INFRINGEMENT.

  • THE NEED FOR A BETTER ANALYSIS OF GLOBAL PRISON CONDITIONS.

  • September 22, 2022

  • AN EMPIRICAL STUDY ON CHOICE OF LAW IN CHINA: A HOME RUN?

  • DIRECT SUITS AND DERIVATIVE ACTIONS: RETHINKING SHAREHOLDER PROTECTION IN COMPARATIVE CORPORATE LAW.

  • SPIRITED AWAY: THE EU'S ADEQUACY DECISION FOR JAPAN AS A ROADMAP FOR U.S. PRIVACY LAW AFTER SCHREMS II.

  • SMALL DEVELOPING ISLAND NATIONS: THE NEED FOR INCREASED FINANCIAL PROTECTION FROM BUNKER OIL SPILL POLLUTION.

  • CLEARTEXTUALISM AND SEXUALISM.

  • January 01, 2015

  • Made in America: why the shale revolution in America is not replicable in China and Argentina.

  • March 22, 2009

  • The private attorney-general in China: potential and pitfalls.

  • Law, society, and medical malpractice litigation in Japan.

  • Restrictions on political activity by judges in Japan and the United States: the cases of Judge Teranishi and Justice Sanders.

  • Bull-Dog Sauce for the Japanese soul? Courts, corporations, and communities - a comment on Haley's view of Japanese law.

  • The good occupation? Law in the allied occupation of Japan.

  • Success or failure? Japan's national strategy on intellectual property and evaluation of its impact from the comparative law perspective.

  • Japanese commercial transactions and sanctions revisited: Sumitomo v. UFJ.

  • Haley and the blowfish.

  • September 22, 2009

  • The method and role of comparative law.

  • Don't copy me, Argentina: constitutional borrowing and rhetorical type.

  • China's attitude toward foreign NGOS.

  • An impossible choice: denial of parents' derivative asylum claims based on their citizen daughter's risk of female genital mutilation.

  • Tightening India's "Golden Straitjacket": how pulling the straps of India's job reservation scheme reflects prudent economic policy.

  • It's not what is on paper, but what is in practice: China's new Labor Contract Law and the enforcement problem.