In a recent Washington Post op-ed, Brian Deese, the former director of the National Economic Council in the Biden administration, calls for a coordinated use of AD/CVDs as
a way to "discourage" China's "anti-market behavior": [...]
In a recent Washington Post op-ed, Brian Deese, the former director of the National Economic Council in the Biden administration, calls for a coordinated use of AD/CVDs as
a way to "discourage" China's "anti-market behavior": [...]
Delores Jones-Brown, Paul Reck, Richard Helfers, and Henry F. Fradella (Howard University, Ramapo College of New Jersey, University of Texas at Tyler and Arizona State University
- School of Criminology and Criminal Justice) have posted A Commentary on Qualified Immunity... [...]
This week, David Elkins (Netanya, Google Scholar) reviews David Gamage (Missouri-Columbia; Google Scholar) & Ari Glogower (Northwestern; Google Scholar), The Policy and Politics
of Alternative Minimum Taxes, 78 Nat’l Tax J. _ (2024). The first Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT) was enacted in 1978 following reports that wealthy taxpayers were [...]
It's by John Cavadini (Notre Dame) so "self-recommending," etc., but I also highly recommend this piece at Church Life Journal. In particular, it should be a must-read
for all administrators and leaders and benefactors and faculty of Catholic universities that might be tempted to imagine that the path to flourishing, or "relevance", [...]
Mundo Antigo em Resenha ISSN: 2965 - 8527 Mundo Antigo em Resenha é um periódico dedicado exclusivamente à publicação de resenhas sobre trabalhos recentes em espanhol
e português em torno de temas relacionados com a língua, literatura, história, arqueologia e filosofia do mundo antigo greco-romano e oriental. [...]
With permission from St. John’s Law School, I am sharing information regarding some remembrances the school has planned for Elayne: Join Us to Celebrate the Life of Professor
Elayne Greenberg The Law School community will be gathering with Professor Elayne Greenberg’s son, Carey Alexander ‘12, and her partner, Dr. [...]
Next year, Nottebohm will be turning 70. Though certainly a landmark decision, Nottebohm, more often than not, has been declared the outlived product of “a ‘romantic period’
in international relations”. Only very recently, Weiler, on this blog, made the point that the argument of a genuine link – underpinning the case of the Commission [...]
Based on parts of yesterday's SCOTUS oral argument that I was able to hear on the road and then various subsequent press reports, it sure sounds like one particularly high-profile
federal defendant is poised to get at least a partial victory from the US Supreme Court on his immunity claims. More broadly, as the Justices now turn from oral [...]
On 14 and 15 February 2025, the 5th Conference for Young Researchers in PIL will take place at Heidelberg University. It will be dedicated to the topic of ‘Digital transformation
and Private International Law. Local connections in boundless spaces’ and feature a keynote speech by Christiane Wendehorst (University of Vienna). [...]
Resolution 2728 (2024) has legally binding effect. Eran Sthoeger makes the claim that the Security Council’s resolution 2728, which demanded an immediate ceasefire in Gaza,
is “not legally binding”. This conclusion, he asseverates, follows from “a sound understanding of the practice of the Security Council under the Charter”. [...]