Domestic court decisions often make headlines around the world. For example, recent United States Supreme Court decisions about the International Court of Justice and the rights of foreign detainees held by the United States at Guantanamo Bay have attracted international attention. However, the role of domestic courts in the world extends far beyond headlines. Seemingly routine decisions on issues such as personal jurisdiction, forum non conveniens, choice of law, extraterritoriality, and arbitration have implications for global governance. Legal scholarship divides these issues into doctrinal categories like civil procedure, conflict of laws, and international law. But by doing so, it misses the bigger picture: for better or worse, domestic courts are pervasively involved in regulating transnational activity.This Article cuts across doctrinal categories to provide a systematic analysis of the global impact of domestic courts. It argues that domestic courts perform two global governance functions: they allocate governance authority, and they determine rights and obligations of transnational actors. It shows that these functions matter not only for litigants, but also for global welfare. And it proposes a method to critically evaluate these functions that moves beyond traditional litigant-focused assessments to analysis of the cross-border effects of domestic court decisions. This method will allow scholars and policy makers to develop the empirical foundations needed for the intensifying debate over the proper role of domestic courts in addressing global challenges.
More Cooperation, Less Uniformity: Tax Deharmonization and the Future of the International Tax Regime
Efforts to foster improved international tax cooperation have become preoccupied with tax harmonization. Deharmonization offers the possibility of harmony without uniformity. By exploring two examples of tax deharmonization in practice and considering the origins and limitations of tax harmonization, this Article brings the traditional emphasis on harmonization into question. It then makes the case that deharmonization--cooperation without uniformity-- could provide a viable alternative. Achieving tax deharmonization's potential would require revisiting some of the most basic elements of our current international tax regime, particularly the benefits principle.
Hull Insurance and General Average -- Some Current Issues
This Article visits some current topics of interest in the area of hull and machinery insurance and general average. It examines the imperfect indemnity that can arise when the owner of a laden cargo vessel incurs expenditure in an unsuccessful attempt to salvage it after the operation of a maritime peril; recent developments in the evolution of the York-Antwerp Rules where, for the first time, we have two versions, the 1994 Rules and the 2004 Rules, existing in parallel with each other; the emerging phenomenon of pirates hijacking vessels for ransom; and the increasing trend towards absorbing general average up to a certain, previously agreed threshold under hull and machinery insurance policies.
Choice of Law and U.S. Maritime Liens
The Aftermath of Norfolk Southern Railway v. James N. Kirby, Pty Ltd.: Jurisdiction and Choice of Law Issues
A Juxtaposition of Hull and Protection & Indemnity Coverages
There are several key areas of interrelated coverages found in standard hull and protection and indemnity (P&I) policies which continue to intrigue the courts. There are also certain issues collateral to these areas of coverage that bear preliminary discussion.
Dagger, Shield, or Double-Edged Sword?: The Reciprocal Nature of the Doctrine of Uberrimae Fidei
Offshore Energy Insurance
The Sky Has Not Fallen Yet on Punitive Damages in Admiralty Cases
Going on Twenty Years: The Pollution Act of 1990 and Claims Against the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund
It is now well known that in the wake of the catastrophic EXXON VALDEZ oil spill off the coast of Alaska on March 24, 1989, Congress passed the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 (OPA or OPA 90). How far have we come since the passage of OPA? What issues remain outstanding? Although many issues raised by OPA have been resolved, or at least are subject to general agreement, a surprising number of issues remain unresolved or are evolving and in flux. Several of these issues relate to defenses under OPA, claims made to recover oil spill response or removal costs, and damages paid by the owners and operators of vessels from which there has been an oil spill or a substantial threat of an oil spill. This Article examines these issues, including the burden of proof to be applied in respect of such claims and the deference to be accorded to the agency operating under the United States Coast Guard that adjudicates and pays these claims.
