Vol. 30 No. 1, September 2006
Index
- What is an International Rule of Law?
- The comparative disadvantage of customary international law.
- The rule of international law.
- American self-defense shouldn't be too distracted by international law.
- The constitutional status of customary international law.
- Executive power v. international law.
- Enforceability of international tribunals' decisions in the United States.
- Enforcing the Avena decision in U.S. Courts.
- International adjudicators and judicial independence.
- Executive power in foreign affairs.
- The textual basis of the president's foreign affairs power.
- The most dangerous branch abroad.
- Foreign and international law sources in domestic constitutional interpretation.
- International law as a resource in constitutional interpretation.
- Constitutional law and transnational comparisons: the Youngstown decision and American exceptionalism.
- Foreign sources and the American constitution.
- Contracting out of the culture wars: how the law should enforce and communities of faith should encourage more enduring marital commitments.
- The law and economics of software security.
- Law outside the market: the social utility of the private foundation.
- Don't knock them until we try them: civil suits as a remedy for knock-and-announce violations after Hudson v. Michigan.
- The slow, just, unfinished demise of the Buckley compromise: Randall v. Sorrell.
- Equipoise, collective rights and the future of the death penalty: Kansas v. Marsh.
- Elevating choice over quality of representation: United States v. Gonzalez-Lopez.