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their counsel with potential class members, until the Supreme Court, in Gulf Oil Co. v. Bernard, called for specific findings and a weighing of interests
that nations never have the legal right to withdraw unilaterally from the unwritten rules of customary international law (CIL), a proposition that we refer...
failed contract law and suggests that it has. Not surprisingly, I hold a different opinion. That is, while I agree with much of what Posner says
casts doubt on the efficiency of legal arrangements that give some creditors an absolute advantage over others in the division of a debtor’s assets
for centuries, unsettled legal authorities who fear it as a threat to commercial order or other normative values. Responding to these fears
David Sweet | Yale Law Journal David Sweet 113 Yale L.J. 219 (2003) Lawyers surely understand sacrifice. The business of representation requires a
copyrighted works and on copyrights fair use doctrine as a mechanism to protect such transformative uses. This Essay argues that the increasing centrality of...
that relying on the buyer’s providing consent for such responses is inadequate, and proposes a new framework for ordinary course covenants and MAE provisions.
Oona Hathaway | Yale Law Journal Oona Hathaway 121 Yale L.J. 252 (2011). This Article offers a new way to understand the enforcement of domestic and
proliferation. The authors here argue that this has become an entrenched feature of the federal appellate process, and it’s a good thing too.