No. 25-1, March 2011
Index
- Adam Linkner, How Salazar v. Buono Synthesizes the Supreme Court?s Establishment Clause Precedent Into a Single Test
- Anand Sithian, ?but the Americans Made Me Do It!?: How United States v. Ubs Makes the Case for Executive Exhaustion
- Andrea Pin, Public Schools, the Italian Crucifix, and the European Court of Human Rights: the Italian Separation of Church and State
- Christina Lembo, Fifa Transfer Regulations and Uefa Player Eligibility Rules: Major Changes in European Football and the Negative Effect on Minors
- Christina Weston, the Enforcement Loophole: Judgment-recognition Defenses as a Loophole to Corporate Accountability for Conduct Abroad
- David J. Bederman, 25 Years of Student Scholarship and Editorship for the Emory International Law Review
- Dustin N. Sharp, Requiem for a Pipedream: Oil, the World Bank, and the Need for Human Rights Assessments
- Huma T. Yasin, Playing Catch-up: Proposing the Creation of Status-based Regulations to Bring Private Military Contractor Firms Within the Purview of International and Domestic Law
- Ilan Saban, Theorizing and Tracing the Legal Dimensions of a Control Framework: Law and the Arab-palestinian Minority in Israel?s First Three Decades (1948?1978)
- Janelle L. Cornwall, it Was the First Strike of Bloggers Ever: an Examination of Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights as Italian Bloggers Take a Stand Against the Alfano Decree
- Joanna Macmillan, Reformasi and Public Corruption: Why Indonesia?s Anti-corruption Agency Strategy Should Be Reformed to Effectively Combat Public Corruption
- John D. Haskell, Hugo Grotius in the Contemporary Memory of International Law: Secularism, Liberalism, and the Politics of Restatement and Denial
- John Witte, Jr. & Nina-louisa Arold, Lift High the Cross?: Contrasting the New European and American Cases on Religious Symbols on Government Property
- Mindy Pava, the Cuban Conundrum: Proposing an International Trademark Registry for Well-known Foreign Marks
- Phoenix X.f. Cai, Making Wto Remedies Work for Developing Nations: the Need for Class Actions
- Rex D. Glensy, the Use of International Law in U.s. Constitutional Adjudication