No. 24-2, December 2010
Index
- Amos N. Guiora, the Quest for Individual Adjudication and Accountability: Are International Tribunals the Right Response to Terrorism?
- Benjamin R. Farley, Calling a State a State: Somaliland and International Recognition
- Brittany T. Cragg, Home Is Where the Halt Is: Mandating Corporate Social Responsibility Through Home State Regulation and Social Disclosure
- Chad P. Ralston, Going it Alone: a Pragmatic Approach to Combating Foreign-effected Tax Evasion
- Charles A. Shanor, Terrorism, Historical Analogies, and Modern Choices
- Dana M. Cohen, Looking for a Way Out: How to Escape the Assisted Suicide Law in England
- Evan J. Wallach, Partisans, Pirates, and Pancho Villa: How International and National Law Handled Non-state Fighters in the "good Old Days" Before 1949 and That Approach's Applicability to the "war on Terror"
- Flora Manship, Collateral Damage of the Imf's Global Economic Relief: a Case Study of Zimbabwe
- Johan D. Van Der Vyver, Prosecuting Terrorism in International Tribunals
- Laura M. Olson, Prosecuting Suspected Terrorists: the "war on Terror" Demands Reminders About War, Terrorism, and International Law
- Mi Hyun Yoon, Trading in a Flash: Implication of High-frequency Trading for Securities Regulators Worldwide
- Michael J. Kelly, Grafting the Command Responsibility Doctrine Onto Corporate Criminal Liability for Atrocities
- Rainer Nickel, Data Mining and "renegade" Aircrafts: the States as Agents of a Global Militant Security Governance Networkthe German Example
- Rajeev Kadambi, the Idea of Human Rights
- Randall Peerenboom, China Stands Up: 100 Years of Humiliation, Sovereignty Concerns, and Resistance to Foreign Pressure on Prc Courts
- Sandra L. Hodgkinson, Are Ad Hoc Tribunals an Effective Tool for Prosecuting International Terrorism Cases?
- Tara Ramanathan, Introduction