Search results for: "Ali" (1199 results)
uses the terms “foreign national” and “noncitizen” interchangeably, and in place of the term “alien,” to mean an individual born outside of the United
statute was successfully challenged, inter alia, on the ground that its exclusive targeting of products liability cases as subject to the split-recovery
Some worried that courts would hold the covenants to be unreasonable restraints on alienation and consequently strike them down. In 1948, the Court
the importance of U.S. nationality in future Alien Tort Statute jurisdictional analysis, offering that the Supreme Court can still bring ATS jurisprudence back in line with ...
among commentators that predatory pricing schemes are rarely tried, and even more rarely successful.”). 63. Id. at 589-90 (citing, inter alia
Holder letter rejected that authority inter alia as resting on Bowers (now overruled by Lawrence), and on an inaccurate reading of Lawrence and Romer as
& Alicia Sansone eds., 2006) (“Hedge funds represented 29 percent of the primary market for institutional loans with spreads of LIBOR + 400 basis points
protections would engender a sense of responsibility to moderate because the pecuniary aims of those companies, even then, did not necessarily align
must be weighed against the possibility that nondemocratically sanctioned appointments may alienate the people from their own constitutional law. It
Julian Ku & John Yoo, Beyond Formalism in Foreign Affairs: A Functional Approach to the Alien Tort Statute, 2004 SUP. CT. REV. 153; John O. McGinnis