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Page 1: Cumulative Subject Index to Volumes 1-31 · 2020. 2. 23. · Cumulative Subject Index to Volumes 1-31 Index Follow this and additional works at: Part of theInternational Law Commons

Case Western Reserve Journal ofInternational Law

Volume 31 | Issue 2

1999

Cumulative Subject Index to Volumes 1-31Index

Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/jil

Part of the International Law Commons

This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Student Journals at Case Western Reserve University School of Law Scholarly Commons.It has been accepted for inclusion in Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law by an authorized administrator of Case Western ReserveUniversity School of Law Scholarly Commons.

Recommended CitationIndex, Cumulative Subject Index to Volumes 1-31, 31 Case W. Res. J. Int'l L. 537 (1999)Available at: https://scholarlycommons.law.case.edu/jil/vol31/iss2/9

Page 2: Cumulative Subject Index to Volumes 1-31 · 2020. 2. 23. · Cumulative Subject Index to Volumes 1-31 Index Follow this and additional works at: Part of theInternational Law Commons

CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX*VOLUMES I-XXX[

ACT OF STATE DOCTRINEPutting Meaning into the Treaty Exception to the Act of StateDoctrine.

Dennis G. Terez (RD) .............................................................. 17:107ADMIRALTY

Admiralty-Jurisdiction Over Aviation Port Claims.Phillip J. Kolczynski (CN) ......................................................... 8:220

ADOPTIONTransnational Adoption From an American Perspective: The Need ForUniversal Uniformity.

Jennifer M. Lippold (N) ........................................................... 27:465AFRICA

African Patent Statutes and Technology Transfer.M ark Sklan (A) .......................................................................... 10:55

Apartheid and Black Labor in South Africa: Applying Section 307 ofthe Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act to Goods Produced by Black SouthAfricans.

Frederic S. Nathan, Jr. (N) ..................................................... 19:421Assassination as a Means of Intervention: The Death of Lumumba -The Rule of Amin.

Christian M . Sternat (N) ......................................................... 10:197The Aouzou Strip: Adjudication of Competing Territorial Claims inAfrica by the International Court of Justice.

Robert W. McKeon, Jr. (N) ..................................................... 23:147The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS): AnAnalysis and Prospects.

Bruce Zagaris (A) ................................................................. 10:93

* Key to symbols: A-Aiticle, BR-Book Review, CN-Case Notes, C-Comments, Intro-

ductory Material, IA-Introductory Article, L-Laws, N-Note, RD-Recent Development, R-Response, S-Speech.

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

AFRICA (continued)Essays in Honour of Judge Taslim Olawale Elias.

Daniel Turack (BR) ................................................................. 27:195Human Rights and Development Using Advanced Technology toPromote Human Rights in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Jennifer Myers (A) ................................................................. 30:343Legal Aspects of Membership in the Organization of African Unity:The Case of the Western Sahara.

Anthony G. Pazzanita (N) ....................................................... 17:123Notes on Legal Literature in East Africa.

Robert M artin (A) .................................................................... 10:123Notes on the Role of the Judiciary in the Constitutional Systems ofEast Africa Since Independence.

Steven B. Pfeiffer (A) ............................................................ 10:11Political Imprisonment in South Africa, Amnesty InternationalPublications.

Jeffrey Hyman (BR) ................................................................. 10:582The Relationship Between International Law and Municipal Law inLight of the Constitution of the Republic of Namibia.

D J. D evine (A) ........................................................................ 26:295Settlement of the Namibian Dispute: The United States Role in Lieu ofU.N. Sanctions.

Deneice C. Jordon-Walker (N) ............................................... 14:543Sovereignty Over Unoccupied Territories - The Western SaharaDecision.

MarkA. Smith, Jr. (N) ............................................................... 9:135Toward Lome III: Perfecting the European Community's AfricanPartnership.

Daniel Girard (N) .................................................................... 16:459Traditional Rights to the Land and Wilderness in South Africa.

P.D . Glavovic (A) .................................................................... 23:281What Now for Sahel?

Joseph C. Kennedy (C) ............................................................ 10:159United States Foreign Policy in Southern Africa: A Myopic Vacuum?

Charles K. Ebinger (A) ........................................................ 10:67

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

AGRICULTUREAttempts to Liberalize International Trade In Agriculture and theProblem of the External Aspects of the Common Agricultural Policy ofthe European Economic Community.

J. Kodwo Bentil (A) ................................................................. 17:335Effects of Regulation on Efficiency of Grain Marketing.

LowellD. Hill (A) .................................................................... 17:389International Intellectual Property Protections for the Living MatterBiotechnology, Multinational Conventions, and the Exception forAgriculture.

Daniel Nugent and David G. Scalise (A) ................................. 27:83Japan's Quantitative Restrictions on the Importation of AgriculturalProducts.

James M. Lyons (A) ................................................................. 15:569Liberalizing Agricultural Trade Between Canada and the United States.

D. Gale Johnson (A) .................................................................... 6:60Public Law 480, American Agriculture, and World Food Demand.

David Helscher (N) ................................................................. 10:739Saving the Blueprints: The International Legal Regime for PlantResources.

David S. Tilford (A) ................................................................. 30:373U.S. Farm Policy and International Agricultural Markets.

Daniel G. Amstutz (IA) ............................................................ 17:321U.S. Policies Affecting International Agricultural Trade.

Leo V. Mayer (A) ..................................................................... 17:421ALIENS

An International Standard of Partial Compensation Upon theExpropriation of an Alien's Property.

Christopher P. Bauman (N) .................................................... 19:103Flickering Lamp Beside the Golden Door. Immigration, theConstitution, and Undocumented Aliens in the 1990s

Michael R. Curran (A) ......................................................... 30:57ANTARCTICA

The Antarctic Treaty Regime: A Workable Compromise or a"Purgatory of Ambiguity?"

Gillian Triggs (A) .................................................................... 17:195Demilitarization and Arms Control: Antarctica.

Harry H. Almond, Jr. (A) ........................................................ 17:229

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

ANTARCTICA (continued)Eagle Over the Ice: The U.S. in the Antarctic, by Christopher C. Joyner& Ethel R. Theis.

JenniferM. Myers (BR) ........................................................... 30:606The Southern Ocean and Marine Pollution: Problems and Prospects.

Christopher C. Joyner (A) 17:165ANTI-TRUST

Antimonopoly Law of Japan: Relating to International BusinessTransactions.

Mitsuo Matsushita and James L. Hildebrand (A) .................... 4:124The Applicability of Common Market Anti-trust Law to Acquisitionsand Mergers.

Kurt H. Biedenkopf (A) ............................................................... 2:75Anti-trust Aspects of U.S.-Japanese Trade.

W ilbur L. Fugate (A) ............................................................... 15:505Anti-trust: Standing for Foreign Governments (Pfizer, Inc. v. Gov't ofIndia, 434 U.S. 308 (1978)).

Richard Jacobson (RD) ........................................................... 10:.833Competition Law for Developing Countries: A Proposal for an Anti-trust Regime in Peru.

Spencer Weber Waller and Rafael Muente (A) ...................... 21:159Fair Trade Commission vs. MITI: History of the Conflicts Between theAntimonopoly Policy and the Industrial Policy in the Post-War Period ofJapan.

Seichi Yoshikawa (A) .............................................................. 15:489The Incompatibility of International Accommodation and PrivateAttorneys General.

Joseph P. Griffi n (I) ..................................................................... 14:3Industrial Property Rights and the Free Movement of Goods in theEuropean Communities.

David R. Bumbak (A) .............................................................. 16:381International Operations: Current Anti-trust Environment.

Henry T. King, Jr. (A) ............................................................... 8:452An Introduction to the Extraterritorial Application of the American Anti-trust Laws.

Carl D . D ool (N ) ....................................................................... 1:132The Limitation of Copyright and Patents by the Rules for the FreeMovement of Goods in the European Common Market.

Valentine Korah (A) .............................................................. 14:7

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

ANTI-TRUST (continued)Malpractice: The Administration of the Murphy Trade Practices Act.

Lawrence R. Bach (BR) ........................................................... 14:643Market Safeguards Against Import Competition: Article XIX of theGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.

Thomas Sauermilch (A) ...................................................... 14:83Restricting the Supply of Japanese Automobiles: Sovereign Compulsionor Sovereign Collusion?

Mitsuo Matsushita and Lawrence Repeta (A) ..................... 14:47Sovereign Immunity and the Suit Against OPEC.

Lawrence Crocker (N) ............................................................. 12:215Trade Friction, Administrative Guidance, and Antimonopoly Law inJapan.

Kozo Toyama, Norifumi Tateishi, & John Palenberg (C) ...... 15:601The Uranium Cartel Saga-Yellowcake and Act of State: What Will BeTheir Eventual Fate?

Raymond J. Pikna, Jr. (N) ....................................................... 12:591ARAB OIL

The Arab Oil Embargo and United States Pressure Against Chile:Economic and Political Coercion and the Charter of the United Nations.

Hartmut Brosche (A) ..................................................................... 7:3Economic Aggression & Self-Defense in International Law: The ArabOil Weapon and Alternative American Responses Thereto.

Paul Stephen Dempsey (A) ....................................................... 9:253ARBITRATION

Conciliation and Arbitration Procedures in Labour Disputes, by theInternational Labour Office.

Jim Shorris (BR) ...................................................................... 15:183Dispute Resolutions and Arbitration in Britain: Current Trends andProspects.

P.B. Beaumont (A) .................................................................. 14:323Enforcement of International Commercial Contracts by Arbitration:Recent Developments.

Hans Bagner (A) ..................................................................... 14:573The Inter-American Convention on International CommercialArbitration.

Charles Robert Norberg (A) ................................................... 13:107International Arbitration.

G.W . Haight (I) ........................................................................ 14:253

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

ARBITRATION (continued)International Arbitration in Denmark.

C. Kaare Pederson (A) ............................................................ 14:259International Arbitration - Its Time Has Arrived!

Gerald Aksen (I) ...................................................................... 14:247International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes.

G ita Gopal (A ) ......................................................................... 14:591International Commercial Arbitration in Europe: Subsidiarity andSupremacy in Light of the Delocalization Debate.

Theodore C. Theofrastous (N) ................................................ 31:455The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal, 1981-83, Richard B. Lillich,ed.

Andrew W. Markley (BR) ....................................................... 17:315Labor Arbitration in the United States and Britain: A ComparativeAnalysis.

Anthony F. Bartlett (A) ........................................................... 14:299Multiparty Disputes and Consolidated Arbitrations: An Oxymoron orthe Solution to a Continuing Dilemma.

Matthew Schwartz (N) ............................................................. 22:341Negotiating Contracts With the Japanese.

Elliott H ahn (A) ....................................................................... 14:377A New Look at International Commercial Arbitration.

Robert Coulson (Survey) ......................................................... 14:359The New World Information Order A Legal Framework for Debate.

Bryan J. Holzberg (N) ............................................................. 14:387The Principle of Reciprocity in the United Nations Convention on theRecognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of 1958.

Young-Joon Mok (A) ............................................................... 21:123Private Party Protection Against Transnational Radiation PollutionThrough Compulsory Arbitration: A Proposal.

Ann Voorhees Billingsley (A) .................................................. 14:339United States-Soviet Commercial Arbitration Under the 1972 TradeAgreement.

J. Alex M orton (N) ..................................................................... 7:121ART LAW

Antiquities in Israel in a Maze of Controversy.Shoshana Bennan (A) ............................................................. 19:343

Due Diligence in Fine Art Transactions.Linda F. Pinkerton (A) ................................................................ 22:1

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

ART LAW (continued)The Dutch Bill: Redefining a Permanent Establishment

Natasha E. Brandt (N) ............................................................. 22:121Protection of Cultural Property and Archaeological Resources: AComprehensive Bibliography of Law-Related Materials.

James AR. Nafziger (BR) ....................................................... 22:117The Recovery of Cultural Artifacts: The Legacy of Our ArchaeologicalHeritage.

M ark F. Lindsey (N) ................................................................ 22:165Rolling Back History: The United Nations General Assembly and theRight to Cultural Property.

Douglas N. Thomason (A) ........................................................ 22:47Shipwreck Legislation and the Preservation of Submerged Artifacts.

Timothy J. Runyan (A) .............................................................. 22:31AUSTRALIA

Australian Taxation of Companies and Shareholders: ImputationArrives Down Under.

Paul E. Von Nessen (A) ............................................................. 19:73Federalism, External Affairs, and Treaties: Recent Developments inAustralia.

Gary A. Rum ble (A) .................................................................... 17:1The Impact of Treaties on Australian Federalism.

Brian R. Opeskin and Donald R. Rothwell (A) .......................... 27:1International Law and Australian Federalism

Brian R. Opeskin and Donald R. Rothwell (BR) .................... 30:339AVIATION

Admiralty-Jurisdiction Over Aviation Port Claims.Phillip J. Kolczynski (CN) ......................................................... 8:220

Aviation: Local Airport Proprietors May Impose Noise Requirementsfor Aircraft Provided the Regulations Are Reasonable and Non-Discriminatory. (British Airways Board and Campagnie National AirFrance v. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, S.D. N.Y.1977).

Peter E. Papps (RD) ................................................................ 10:223Aviation-Warsaw Convention (Warsaw v. TransWorld Airlines, Inc.,E.D. Pa. 1977).

Jeffrey Hyman (RD) ................................................................ 10:573

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INTL L.

AVIATION (continued)Cabotage and Control: Bringing 1938 U.S. Aviation Policy into the JetAge.

Howard E. Kass (N) ................................................................ 26:143Stratis v. Eastern Air Lines: International or Non-InternationalTransportation.

Patricia Barlow (CN) .............................................................. 15:623BANKING LAW

An Evaluation of the Proposed Fair Trade in Financial Services Act.Dennis Bower (N) .................................................................... 27:407

Bank Secrecy and Criminal Matters: Cayman Islands and U.S.Cooperative Development.

Ian Paget-Brown (A) ............................................................... 20:369Banks' Rights of Setoff in Latin American Countries.

Lewis M . Smoley (A) ............................................................... 13:141"Compelled Consent": An Oxymoron with Sinister Consequences forCitizens Who Patronize Foreign Banking Institutions.

Harvey M. Silets and Susan W. Brenner (A) .......................... 20:435Extraterritorial Imperatives.

Henry Harfield and Rachel E. Deming (A) ............................ 20:393The Foreign Bank Supervision Enhancement Act of 1991: Short RunConsequences En Route to the Long Term Goal.

L. Todd Gibson (N) .................................................................. 27:119Money and Exchange Dealing in International Banking, by Nigel R.L.Hudson.

Kenneth S. Ginsburg (BR) ...................................................... 13:433Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties as a Way to Pierce Bank Secrecy.

James LK. Knapp (A) .............................................................. 20:405The Secrets of Foreign Bankers and the Federal Investigation: TotteringBalances.

John L. O'Donnell, Jr. (A) ...................................................... 20:509Swiss Bank Secrecy: Its Limits Under Swiss and International Laws.

Oliver Dunant and Michele Wassmer (A) ......................... 20:541Swiss Bank Secrecy Laws and the U.S. Internal Revenue Service.

Robert Louis Stauter (N) ......................................................... 20:623Switzerland: New Exceptions to Bank Secrecy Laws Aimed at MoneyLaundering and Organized Crime.

M ichde M oser (N) .................................................................. 27:321

[Vol. 31:537544

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

BIODIVERSITYSaving the Blueprints: The International Legal Regime for PlantResources.

David Tilford (A) .................................................................... 30:373BRAZIL, SEE ALSO FOREIGN INVESTMENT

Incentives for Investment in Brazil.Sr. JM. Pinheiro Neto and Irene Dias da Silva (A) .............. 13:123

Multinationals in Brazil.JM . Pinheiro Neto (A) .............................................................. 8:311

BULGARIABulgarian Trade and Investment: A Realistic Assessment

David A. Levy (A) .................................................................... 27:203CAMBODIA

The Nondemocratic Benefits of Elections: The Case of Cambodia.Nhun T. Vu (A) ........................................................................ 28:395

CANADAAgriculture: A Canadian View.

T.K. Warley (A) ............................. 6:66The Americanization Syndrome in the United States-CanadianRelationship.

John Sloan Dickey (A) ................................................................ 6:82The Auto Fact: Precedent or Isolated Phenomenon?

John Rehm (A) ............................................................................. 6:99Canada and the United States: Dispute Settlement and the InternationalJoint Commission-Can This Experience Be Applied to Law of the SeaIssues?

M axwell Cohen (A) ..................................................................... 8:69Canadian-American Trade Problems in a Multilateral Context.

Theodore R. Gates (A) ................................................................ 6:51Canadian Foreign Investment Policy.

Robert Gualtieri (A) .................................................................... 6:92Canadian Perspectives on Legal Theory, by Richard F. Devlin.

MarkR. MacGuigan (BR) ....................................................... 23:107The Constitutional Protection of Freedom of Religion, Expression, andAssociation in Canada and the United States: A Comparative Analysis.

Robert A. Sedler (A) ................................................................ 20:577

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

CANADA (continued)Cultures in Collision: The Interaction of Canadian and U.S. TelevisionBroadcast Policies (Canadian-U.S. Conference on CommunicationsPolicy).

Ellin E. Rosenthal (BR) ........................................................... 16:303Factors Influencing Canadian-American Trade: A Canadian View.

Jam es A. Coutts (A) ..................................................................... 6:56The Immigrant Investor Program: Cleaning up Canada's Act.

Jam es D eRosa (N) ................................................................... 27:359Inside the Canadian Judicial System: Judges and Judging, by PeterMcConnick and Ian Greene.

Peter McCormic and Ian Greene (BR) ................................... 23:323Liberalizing Agricultural Trade Between Canada and the United States.

D. Gale Johnson (A) .................................................................... 6:60NAFTA Chapter 19 or the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body: AHobson's Choice for Canada?

M ichael S. Valihora (A) .......................................................... 30:447The Newfoundland Offshore Reference: Federal-Provincial ConflictOver Offshore Energy Resources.

Edward A. Fitzgerald (A) ............................................................ 23:1Newspaper-Broadcast Cross Ownership Policy: A New Standard FromAcross the Border.

Karen A. Hoffman (N) ............................................................. 23:333Notes on Some Implications of Enlargement of the E.E.C. for Canada.

A.R.A . Gherson (A) ................................................................... 6:116An Overview of Canadian Law and Policy Governing Great LakesWater Quantity Management.

Canadian Environmental Law Research Foundation (A) ..... 18:109

CANADA (continued)The Perils of Rural Land Use Planning: The Case of Canada.

M ichael L Krauss (A) ................................................................ 23:65Possible Trade Policy Consequences of the Canadian ForeignInvestment Policy.

Robert E. H udec (A) .................................................................... 6:74Symposium: United States-Canadian Energy Resource Development.The Future of Canadian Energy Resource Development.

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

Bilateral Exploitation of North American Energy Resources - AnIntroduction.

David E. Furlong (A) .................................................................. 5:36Many Splendored Possibilities or Hobson's Choice? - Who Made thePolicies and What Are the Assumptions?

Richard W. Edwards, J. (A) ........................................................ 5:39A View From the North.

A.R. Thompson (A) ...................................................................... 5:52A Continental Energy Policy - An Examination of Some of the CurrentIssues.

M ichaelA. Galway (A) ............................................................... 5:65The Effect of Law, Economics, and Politics on Energy ResourcesDevelopment.

Earl Finbar M urphy (A) ............................................................. 5:81The Trade Reform Act.

John H. Jackson (A) .................................................................. 6:107Trends in the United States Supreme Court's Use of the RipenessDoctrine in Free Speech and Association Cases: A Comparison withCanadian Trends.

Barbara Child (A) ................................................................... 10:415The United States and Canada: A Comparison of CorporateNonrecognition Provisions.

Catherine Brown and Christine Manolakas (A) ....................... 30:1CANADA-U.S. FREE TRADE AGREEMENT

Re-evaluation of the Dispute Resolution Mechanism in the Canada-U.S.Free Trade Agreement: The Softwood Lumber Dispute.

James Graham (N) .................................................................. 28:473CENTRAL AMERICA

Investment Possibilities in the Central American Common Market.Jeffiey P. Rudolph (N) ............................................................ 4:37

CHILDRENThe Child in International Law: A Pathfinder and SelectedBibliography.

Christine Alice Corcos (A) ...................................................... 23:171Lessons From Norway: The Children's Ombudsman as a Voice forChildren.

Gary B. M elton (A) .................................................................. 23:197

19991

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

CHILDREN (continued)Protecting Children - and Their Families - From Abuse: The ClevelandCrisis and England's Children Act 1989.

Robert E. Rains (A) ................................................................. 23:255Regulating the Internet: The New Battle Against Child Pornography.

Lesli C. Esposito (N) ............................................................... 30:541Transnational Adoption From an American Perspective: The Need forUniversal Uniformity.

Jennifer M . Lippold (N) ........................................................... 27:465CHILE

The Arab Oil Embargo and United States Pressure Against Chile:Economic and Political Coercion and the Charter of the United Nations.

HartmutBrosche (A) ..................................................................... 7:3Legal Remedies for Domestic Violence in Chile and the United States:Cultural Relativism, Myths, and Realities.

Katherine M . Culliton (A) ....................................................... 26:183CHINA (SEE ALSO FOREIGN INVESTMENT: HONG KONG)

Certain Legal Aspects of Recognizing the People's Republic of China.H ungdah Chiu (A) ................................................................... 11:389

China After Tiananmen Square: An Assessment of Its BusinessEnvironment.

Beverley H. Earle (A) .............................................................. 23:421China and the International Legal Order An Historical Introduction.

Daniel J. Hoffheimer (I) .......................................................... 11:251China Policy: Old Problems in East Asia, by A. Doak Barnett.

M arilyn Gottlieb (BR) ............................................................. 11:445China's Claim of Sovereignty Over Spratly and Paracel Islands: AnHistorical and Legal Perspective.

Teh-Kuang Chang (A) ............................................................. 23:399A Comparative Analysis of Contemporary Constitutional Procedure.

M in Zhou (A ) ........................................................................... 30:149Establishment of Diplomatic Relations Between the United States andthe People's Republic of China.

President Jimmy Carter ........................................................... 11:227Exporting to the People's Republic of China.

Radovan S. Pavelic (A) ........................................................... 11:237Judicial Review of Administration in the People's Republic of China.

Jyh-pin Fa & Shao-chuan Leng (A) ....................................... 23:447

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

CHINA (continued)Lateral Movements: Legal Flexibility and Foreign InvestmentRegulation in China.

Peter Howard Come (A) ......................................................... 27:247Mission to China of the Section of International Law of the AmericanBar Association.

Henry T. King, Jr. (I) ............................................................... 11:237Prospects for Arriving at a Trade Agreement and Granting MostFavored Nation Status to the People's Republic of China.

Charles A. Vanik () ................................................................. 11:231Settlement of the Macao Issue: Distinctive Features of Beijing'sNegotiating Behavior.

Jaw-ling Joanne Chang (A) .................................................... 20:253Sino-Japanese Trade in the Post-Normalization Era.

David Leng and Shao-chuan Leng (A) ................................... 11:267Strung Up or Shot Down? The Death Penalty in Hong Kong and Chinaand Implications for Post-1997.

Andrew Scobell (A) ................................................................. 20:147CIVIL STRIFE

A Search of Legal Norms in Contemporary Situations of Civil Strife?Ross R. Oglesby (A) .................................................................... 3:30

Terrorism and National Liberation Movements: Can Rights DeriveFrom Wrongs.

Robert A. Friedlander (Dialogue) ......................................... 13:281COAL

The Worlds of Coal - The Perspectives from the U.S.A.RichardL. Gordon (A) ............................................................ 10:659

COMPETING CLAIMSThe Aouzou Strip: Adjudication of Competing Territorial Claims inAfrica by the International Court of Justice.

Robert W. McKeon, Jr. (N) ..................................................... 23:147China's Claim of Sovereignty Over Spratly and Paracel Islands: AHistorical and Legal Perspective.

Teh-Kuang Chang (A) ............................................................. 23:399Diego Garcia: Competing Claims to a Strategic Isle.

Timothy P. Lynch (N) .............................................................. 16:101The Tuniso-Libyan Continental Shelf Case.

Douglas C. Hodgson (A) ............................................................. 16:1

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

COMPETING CLAIMS (continued)Who Owns the Great Lakes? Posturing for Control of an InternationalResource.

David S. Hoffman (N) ................................................................ 16:71CONFLICT OF LAWS

A Comparative Approach to the Conflict of Characterization in PrivateInternational Law.

Vronique Allarousse (A) ........................................................ 23:479CONSTITUTION (U.S.)

Bank Secrecy and Criminal Matters: Cayman Islands and U.S.Cooperative Development.

Ian Paget-Brown (A) ............................................................... 20:369The Constitutional Protection of Freedom of Religion, Expression, andAssociation in Canada and the United States: A Comparative Analysis.

Robert A. Sedler (A) ................................................................ 20:577"Compelled Consent": An Oxymoron with Sinsister Consequences forCitizens Who Patronize Foreign Banking Institutions.

Harvey M. Silets and Susan W. Brenner (A) .......................... 20:435Extraterritorial Imperatives.

Henry Harfield and Rachel Deming (A) ................................. 20:393Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties as a Way to Pierce Bank Secrecy.

James LK. Knapp (A) .............................................................. 20:405The Secrets of Foreign Bankers and the Federal Investigation: TotteringBalances.

John L. O'Donnell, Jr. (A) ...................................................... 20:509CONSTITUTIONALISM

The Broad Strokes of International Constitutionalism and Its Effects onthe NAFTA Regime.

EdwardAdam (A) ................................................................... 27:557A Comparative Analysis of Contemporary Constitutional Procedure.

M in Zhou (A ) ........................................................................... 30:149Emerging Trends in International Constitutionalism: A ComparativeApproach.

Edward A. M earns, Jr. (I) ........................................................... 28:1The Indigenization of Constitutionalism in the Japanese Experience.

Christopher A. Ford (A) .............................................................. 28:3COPYRIGHT

Battling Motion Picture Pirates in Turbid International Waters.James J. M erriman (N) ........................................................... 23:623

550 [Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

COPYRIGHT (continued)The Limitation of Copyright and Patents by the Rules for the FreeMovement of Goods in the European Common Market

Valentine Korah (A) .................................................................... 14:7Literary Copyright and Public Lending Right

Daniel Y. M ayer (N) ................................................................ 18:483The Question of Berne Entry for the United States.

Richard Jacobson (N) ............................................................. 11:421CRIMINAL LAW

Judicial Interpretation of Silence: The Criminal Evidence Order of 1988.Thomas P. Quinn, Jr. (N) ....................................................... 26:365

Strng Up or Shot Down?: The Death Penalty in Hong Kong and Chinaand Implications for Post-1997.

Andrew Scobell (A) ................................................................ 20:147It's Not A Cultural Thing: Disparat Domestic Enforcement ofInternational Criminal Procedure Standards - A Comparison of theUnited States and Egypt.

Sohail M ered (N) .................................................................... 28:141The 1994 I.L.C. Draft Statute for and International Criminal Court: APrincipled Appraisal of Jurisdictional Structure.

Bradley E. Berg (A) ................................................................. 28:221CUBA

The Legality of the U.S. Economic Blockade of Cuba UnderInternational Law.

Paul A. Schneyer and Virginia Barta (A) ............................... 13:451The Cuban Liberty and Democratic Solidarity (LIBERTAD) Act of1996: Isolationist Obstacle to Policy Engagement

M ichelle Arendt (N) ................................................................. 30:251CULTURAL PROPERTY

Common Cultural Property: The Search for Rights of ProtectiveIntervention.

M. Catherine Vernon (N) ........................................................ 26:435CZECHOSLAVAKIA

Joint Ventures in the U.S.S.R., Czechoslavakia, and Poland.Georgios N. Boukaouris (A) ....................................................... 21:1

DEBTThe Apportionment of Public Debt and Assets During State Secession.

Daniel S. Blum (N) ................................................................. 29:263

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

DEBT (continued)Contributions of Lesser-Developed Nations to International Law: TheLatin American Experience.

Frank Griffith Dawson (A) ....................................................... 13:37Debt Relief for the Poorer Developing Countries.

George C. Abbott (A) .................................................................. 19:1The Foreign Debt: From Liquidity Crisis to Growth Crisis.

Sergio Amaral (A) ..................................................................... 19:17New Directions in Debt Management.

Stephany Griffith-Jones and Lucy Nichols (A) ......................... 19:53Understanding International Debt Crisis.

James R. Barth, Michael D. Bradley,and Paul C. Panayotacos (A) ................................................... 19:31

DENMARKInternational Arbitration in Denmark.

C. Kaare Pederson (A) ............................................................ 14:259DIPLOMATIC IMMUNITY

Diplomatic Immunity: Implementing the Vienna Convention ofDiplomatic Relations.

Claudia H. Dulmage (RD) ...................................................... 10:287DISPUTE RESOLUTION

Going Bananas over E.E.C. Preferences?: A Look at the Banana TradeWar and the WTO's Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governingthe Settlement of Disputes.

Zsolt K. Bessk6 (A) ................................................................. 28:265Re-evaluation of the Dispute Resolution Mechanism in the Canada-U.S.Free Trade Agreement: The Softwood Lumber Dispute.

Jam es Graham (N) ................................................................. 28:473DIVORCE

Annulments: A Comparative Study of Jurisdiction and Recognition ofForeign Decrees.

Donald J. Newman (N) .............................................................. 3:176Corporate Divorce - Japanese Style.

Henry T. King, Jr. (C) ............................................................... 6:250Isle of Hispaniola: American Divorce Haven?

Robert Steuk (N ) ........................................................................ 5:198

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

DOMESTIC VIOLENCEFrom Victim to Defendant The Life Sentence of British Women.

Susan S.M. Edwards (A) ......................................................... 26:261Legal Remedies for Domestic Violence in Chile and the United States:Cultural Relativism, Myths, and Realities.

Katherine M. Culliton (A) ....................................................... 26:183DRUGS AND NARCOTICS

United States Seizure of Stateless Drug Smuggling Vessels on the HighSeas: Is It Legal?

M ichael Tousley (N) ................................................................ 22:375EGYPT (SEE ALSO FOREIGN INVESTMENT; MIDDLE EAST)

An Analysis of Egyptian Peace Policy Toward Israel: From Resolution242 (1967) to the 1979 Peace Treaty.

M. CherifBassiouni (A) .............................................................. 12:3Economic Implications of the Peace Treaty Between Egypt and Israel.

DavidAviel (A) .......................................................................... 12:57An Examination of Compensation Terms in the United States-EgyptBilateral Investment Treaty.

Saul Aronson (N) ..................................................................... 16:287Foreign Investment Incentives in the Developing World: TheLegislation of Greece, Egypt, Pakistan, Thailand, and the Republic ofChina.

Paul Stephen Dempsey (A) ..................................................... 11:575The Legal Framework of Foreign Investment in Egypt.

Gamal ElNazer (A) ................................................................. 11:613It's Not A Cultural Thing: Disparate Domestic Enforcement ofInternational Criminal Procedure Standards - A Comparison of theUnited States and Egypt.

Sohail M ered (N) .................................................................... 28:141ENERGY

A Continental Energy Policy - An Examination of Some of the CurrentIssues.

MichaelA. Galway (A) ............................................................... 5:65British Energy Conservation.

Dr. John Cunningham (I) ........................................................ 10-617The Effect of Law, Economics, and Politics on Energy ResourcesDevelopment.

Earl Finbar Murphy (A) ............................................................. 5:81

1999] 553

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CASE W. RES. J. INTL L.

ENERGY (continued)Meeting the Challenge of a World Energy Shortage.

Howard M. Metzenbaum (I) .................................................... 10.613The Newfoundland Offshore Reference: Federal-Provincial ConflictOver Offshore Energy Resources.

EdwardA. Fitzgerald (A) ............................................................ 23:1Private Party Protection Against Transnational Radiation PollutionThrough Compulsory Arbitration: A Proposal.

Ann Voorhees Billingsley (A) .................................................. 14:339A Survey of the United States Treaties and Agreements Involving thePeaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy.

Ann B. Voorhees (N) ................................................................ 10:671Symposium: United States-Canadian Energy Resource Development.

Symposium Authors ..................................................................... 5:36U.S.-Mexican Energy Relations in the 1980s: New Resources VersusOld Dilemmas.

Christopher C. Joyner (A) ...................................................... 12:485World Energy-The Resource Picture.

Vincent E. M cKelvey (A) ......................................................... 10:597The Uranium Cartel Saga - Yellowcake and Act of State: What Will BeTheir Eventual Fate?

Raymond J. Pikna, Jr. (N) ....................................................... 12:591ENVIRONMENT

Global and Regional Approaches to the Protection and Preservation ofthe Marine Environment.

Boleslaw Adam Boczek (A) ....................................................... 16:39Governmental Hypocrisy and the Extraterritorial Application of NEPA.

Silvia M . Riechel (N) ............................................................... 26:115IMCO: An Environmentalist's Perspective.

Eldon V.C. Greenburg (A) ....................................................... 18:131Insurance Coverage for Pollution Liability in the United States and theUnited Kingdom: Covering Troubled Waters.

Thomas C. Gilchrist (N) .......................................................... 23:109International Environmental Law, by Bo Johnson.

Les Levinson (BR) ................................................................... 11:211International Environmental Law: International ConventionsConcerning Oil Pollution at Sea.

Thomas A. M ensah (A) .............................................................. 8:110ENVIRONMENT

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

ENVIRONMENT (continued)The Modem Law of the Sea: Framework for the Protection andPreservation of the Marine Environment

Moira L. McConnell and Edgar Gold (A) ................................ 23:83Practical Application of International Environmental Law: Does It WorkAt All?

Martin D. Gelfand (N) .............................................................. 29:73ESPERANTO

Esperanto: An International Language for International Law.RalphL. Harry (A) .................................................................. 10:817

ETHIOPIAThe 1991 Transitional Charter of Ethiopia: A New Application of theSelf-Determination Principle.

Aaron P. Michaeu (A) ................................................................ 28:367EUROPEAN COMMUNITY (E.C.)

Alternative Roads to Economic Integration: The Case for CurrencyCompetition in European Integration.

D eepak Lal (S) ......................................................................... 22:299Antidumping Law and Practice in the United States and the EuropeanCommunities, by Edwin A. Vermulst.

DavidD. Knoll (BR) ................................................................ 20:293The Applicability of Common Market Anti-trust Law to Acquisitionsand Mergers.

Kurt H. Biedenkopf (A) ............................................................... 2:75Attempts to Liberalize International Trade In Agriculture and theProblem of the External Aspects of the Common Agricultural Policy ofthe European Economic Community.

J. Kodwo Bentil (A) ................................................................. 17:335A Comparative Analysis of Proposals for the Legal Protection ofComputerized Databases: NAFrA vs. The European Communities.

W. Joseph Melnick (N) .............................................................. 26:57Doing Business and United States Commercial Treaties: The Case withthe Member States of the E.E.C.

Joseph J. Norton (A) ..................................................................... 5:4The E.C.: A Hungarian View Toward 1992.

Bela Kadar (A) ........................................................................ 22:269E.E.C. Law: A Practical Guide.

Christine Alice Corcos (A) ...................................................... 22:195

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

EUROPEAN COMMUNITY (continued)Europe 1992 and Beyond.

Norbert W alter (S) ................................................................... 22:331Europe 1992 and the Evolution of the Multilateral Trading System.

Sylvia Ostry (S) ........................................................................ 22:311Europe 1992 - The Quiet Revolution.

Lynn S. Baker (A) .................................................................... 22:183European Community/Hungary Relations.

Donald E. deKieffer (A) ............................................................ 21:55The Financial Integration of the European Community in Project 1992.

Asim Erdilek (A) ...................................................................... 22:245Industrial Property Rights and the Free Movement of Goods in theEuropean Communities.

DavidR. Bumbak (A) .............................................................. 16:381Multinational Corporations: A Framework of Law for the EuropeanCommunity.

M orris H . W olff (A) ................................................................... 8:468New E.E.C. Safeguard Measures: Regulation 288/82.

Selma M. Lussenburg (A) ........................................................ 16:337The New Europe.

Jeane J. Kirkpatrick (S) ........................................................... 21:109A Problem of Privilege: In-House Counsel and the Attorney-ClientPrivilege in the United States and the European Community.

Alison M .H ill (N) .................................................................... 27:145Problems with the E.C. Approach to Harmonization of Product LiabilityLaw.

M arianne Corr (A) .................................................................. 22:235The Subsidiarity Principle in European Union Law - AmericanFederalism Compared.

W . Gary Vause (A) .................................................................... 27:61Toward Lome III: Perfecting the European Community's AfricanPartnership.

Daniel Girard (N) .................................................................... 16:459A View of the Single Market: Trade in Services in E.C. '92.

Terry Smith Labat (A) ............................................................. 22:283EUROPEAN CONVENTION (SEE ALSO HUMAN RIGHTS)

Applicability of the European Convention on Human Rights to NorthernIreland.

David R. Lowry and Robert J. Spjut (A) ................................. 10:251

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

EUROPEAN PARLIAMENTDirect Elections to the European Parliament.

Dr. Peter-Christian Miieller-Graff (A) ....................................... 11:1EUROPEAN UNION

Creating Data Protection Legislation in the United States: AnExamination of Current Legislation in the European Union, Spain, andthe United States.

Jennifer M. Myers (N) ............................................................ 28:109Television Without Frontiers: The European Union's ContinuingStruggle for Cultural Survival.

Shaun P. O'Connell ................................................................ 28:501EXECUTIVE AGREEMENTS

International Executive Agreements: Their Constitutionality, Scope, andEffect.

Alfred P. Knoll (A) ...................................................................... 2:94EXPORT CONTROL

Licensing Impact of Foreign Policy Motivated Retroactive Re-exportRegulations.

Brian G. Brunsvold and James M. Bagarazzi (A) .................. 15:289Lifting the Export Ban on Alaskan Oil: A Trilateral Trade Proposal.

Steven R. Perles (A) ................................................................ 15:527EXPORT SUBSIDIES

Export Subsidies: Countervailing Duties - Zenith Radio Corporation v.United States, 98 S. Ct. 2441 (1978).

Eric Garfinkel (RD) ................................................................. 11:187Export Subsidies: Countervailing Duties-United States v. Zenith RadioCorp., 430 F. Supp. 242 (1977).

Jeffrey Hyman (RD) ................................................................ 10:577Section 1912 of the Export-Import Bank Act and the BombardierSubway Car Case.

M ichael Scott (C) ..................................................................... 16:125EXPROPRIATION

An International Standard of Partial Compensation Upon theExpropriation of an Alien's Property.

Christopher P. Bauman (N) .................................................... 19:103EXTRADITION

An Examination of Extradition of Draft Dodgers: The Case ofRedenbacher Herring.

Franklin Burns (A) .................................................................. 13:545

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

EXTRADITION (continued)Extradition and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

Janice M .Brabyn (A) .............................................................. 20:169Extradition: The Statute of Limitations is Tolled by Constructive Flight- Jhirad v. Ferrandine, 536 F.2d 478 (2d Cir. 1976).

Phyllis Culp (CN) .................................................................... 10:521Legal Assistance in Criminal Cases and Some Important Questions ofExtradition.

Valery Shupilov (A) ................................................................. 15:127State Department Determinations of Political Offenses: Death Knell forthe Political Offense Exception in Extradition Law.

Kenneth S. Sternberg and David L. Skelding (N) ................... 15:137FISHERIES

Fisheries: Canada-United States Reciprocal Fisheries Relations Underthe Interim Fisheries Agreement of 1978.

Jam es T. Ball (RD) .................................................................. 11:201Fishery Conservation and Management Act of 1976: AnAccommodation of State, Federal, and International Interests.

Arthur J. Tassi III (N) .............................................................. 10:703FOREIGN INVESTMENT (SEE ALSO INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS)

Bulgarian Trade and Investment: A Realistic Assessment.David A. Levy (A) .................................................................... 27:203

China After Tiananmen Square: An Assessment of Its BusinessEnvironment.

Beverley H. Earle (A) .............................................................. 23:421Debt-for-Nature Swaps: Effective But Not Enforceable.

Tamara J. Hrynik (N) .............................................................. 22:141Possible Trade Policy Consequences of the Canadian ForeignInvestment Policy.

Robert E. H udec (A) .................................................................... 6:74Development Assistance-A Tool Of Foreign Policy.

Lynne Dratler Finney (A) ....................................................... 15:213Dominican Republic Investment Opportunities: A Survey.

Luis 0 . Beltrg (N) .................................................................... 13:165An Examination of Compensation Terms in the United States-EgyptBilateral Investment Treaty.

Saul Aronson (N) ..................................................................... 16:287

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

FOREIGN INVESTMENT (continued)Foreign Acquisition of a United States Business: The TaxConsiderations.

William L. Bricker, Jr. & James M. Boyd, Jr. (A) ................. 11:487Foreign Direct Investment in the United States: Advantages andBarriers.

Julius L. Katz (A) ..................................................................... 11:473Foreign Investment Incentives in the Developing World: TheLegislation of Greece, Egypt, Pakistan, Thailand, and the Republic ofChina.

Paul Stephen Dempsey (A) ..................................................... 11:575Foreign Investment in United States Real Estate: Federal and StateRegulation.

Leslie J. Levinson (N) .............................................................. 12:231The Foreign Ownership Disclosure Act of 1989: Do You Know WhoOwns Your Piece of the Rock?

Christopher M. Ernst (N) ........................................................ 23:593Impasse and Accommodation: The Protection of Private Direct ForeignInvestment in the Developing States.

Lyman H. Heine (A) ................................................................ 14:465Incentives for Investment in Brazil.

Sr. J.M. Pinheiro Neto and Irene Dias da Silva (A) .............. 13:123The Industrial Cooperation Contract in East-West Trade.

Andrej Szumdnski (A) ................................................................ 21:87Joint Ventures in the U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, and Poland.

Georgios N. Boukaouris (A) ....................................................... 21:1Lateral Movements: Legal Flexibility and Foreign InvestmentRegulation in China.

Peter Howard Corne (A) ......................................................... 27:247The Legal Framework of Foreign Investment in Egypt.

Gamal ElNazer (A) ................................................................. 11:613Private Rights of Action Against Foreign Entities Under the UnitedStates Mineral Leasing Acts.

Robert G. Berger (A) ............................................................... 15:343Soviet Efforts to Achieve Economic Integration: The Causes,Consequences, and Prospects.

Robert M .Rosh (A) ................................................................... 21:67

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INTL L.

FOREIGN POLICYDevelopment Assistance-A Tool of Foreign Policy.

Lynne Dratler Finney (A) ....................................................... 15:213From Nuremberg to Rome: A Step Backward for U.S. Foreign Policy.

Henry T. King and Theodore C. Theofrastous (A) ................... 31:47The Reagan Administration Versus International Law.

Burns H . W eston (S) ................................................................ 19:295FORENSIC MEDICINE

Forensic Medicine: The State of the Art-Great Britain: Francis E. Camps .......................................................... 2:16Hungary: L Gyula Fazekas ................................................................... 2:19Israel: Heinrich Karplus ....................................................................... 2:23United States: Oliver C. Schroeder, Jr. ............................................... 2:25Latin America: Eduardo Vargas .......................................................... 2:28

FORUM SELECTIONForum Selection Covenants in American Practice: Bremen inPerspective.

John R. Liebman and Leslie M. Weline (A) ............................ 11:559FREE SPEECH

Trends in the United States Supreme Court's Use of the RipenessDoctrine in Free Speech and Association Cases: A Comparison withCanadian Trends.

Barbara Child (A) ................................................................... 10:415FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT

A Brief Review of the Provisions in Recent Agreements ConcerningFreedom of Movement Issues in the Modem World.

Daniel C. Turack (A) ................................................................. 11:95GATT

Domestic International Sales Corporation as a Subsidy Under GATT:Possible Remedies.

Eric Schmalz (A) ......................................................................... 5:87The GATT Declaration on Trade Measures Taken for Balance-of-Payments Purposes.

Frieder Roessler (A) ................................................................ 12:383GATIT Safeguards: A Critical Review of Article XIX and ItsImplementation in Selected Countries.

Jorge F. Perez-Lopez (A) ........................................................ 23:517

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

GATT (continued)Implementing the Tokyo Round: National Constitutions andInternational Economic Rules, by John H. Jackson, Jean-Victor Louis,and Mitsuo Matsushita.

Andrew W. Markley (BR) ....................................................... 17:159Market Safeguards Against Import Competition: Article XIX of theGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.

Thomas Sauermilch (A) ............................................................ 14:83GENEVA CONVENTION

A Survey of Penal Sanctions Under Protocol I to the GenevaConvention of August 12, 1949.

S. Solf and E.R. Cummings (A) ................................................. 9:205GERMANY

Closing a Chapter of History: Germany's Right to Compensation for theSudetenland.

Charles A. Schiller (N) ........................................ ................... 26:401The Disputes and Arbitration Commissions: Social Organs for theAdministration of Justice in the German Democratic Republic.

Edith G. Brown (A) ....................................................................... 1:5Recognition of the DDR: Some Legal Aspects of West Germany'sForeign Policy and the Quest for German Reunification.

Karl M . Schwenkel (N) ................................................................ 7:94GREAT BRITAIN

Britain's Industrial Relations Act of 1971.Edwin R. Teple (C) ............................................................... 4:30

Dispute Resolutions and Arbitration in Britain: Current Trends andProspects.

P.B. Beaumont (A) .................................................................. 14:323Eavesdropping on the Compromising Emanations of ElectronicEquipment: The Laws of England and the United States.

Christopher J. Seline (N) ......................................................... 23:359Forensic Medicine: The State of the Art- Great Britain.

Francis E. Camps (A) ................................................................. 2:16From Victim to Defendant The Life Sentence of British Women.

Susan S.M. Edwards (A) ......................................................... 26:261The Impact of American Law on English and Commonwealth Law,edited by Jerome B. Elkind.

HowardD. Denbin (BR) ......................................................... 11:455

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

GREAT BRITAIN (continued)Insurance Coverage for Pollution Liability in the United States and theUnited Kingdom.

Thomas C. Gilchrist (N) .......................................................... 23:109Labor Arbitration in the United States and Britain: A ComparativeAnalysis.

Anthony F. Bartlett (A) ........................................................... 14:299On the Brink of Reform: Political Party Funding in Britain.

Lisa E. K lein (A ) ......................................................................... 31:1GREAT LAKES

Who Owns the Great Lakes? Posturing for Control of an InternationalResource.

David S. Hoffnann (N) .............................................................. 16:71Great Lakes Legal Seminar. Diversion and Consumptive Use.

M axwell Cohen (IA) ................................................................ 18:xiiiIntroductory Remarks.

Donna W . W ise (IA) .................................................................... 18:1Opening Remarks.

Henry T. King, Jr. (IA) ................................................................ 18:7Great Lakes Legal Symposium: Diversion and Consumptive Uses.

Sydney R. Harris (A) ................................................................. 18:11Great Lakes Diversion and Consumptive Uses.

Michael J. Donahue, Alicia A. Bixby, & David Siebert ........... 18:19The Great Lakes Charter Toward a Basinwide Strategy for ManagingThe Great Lakes.

Peter V. MacAvoy (A) ............................................................... 18:49Inter and Intrastate Usage of Great Lakes Waters: A Legal Overview.

A. Dan Tarlock (A) .................................................................... 18:67An Overview of Canadian Law and Policy Governing Great LakesWater Quantity Management.

Canadian Environmental Law Research Foundation (A) ..... 18:109Public International Law and Water Quantity Management in aCommon Drainage Basin: The Great Lakes.

Sharon A. Williams (A) ........................................................... 18:155Lake Diversion at Chicago.

Bruce Barker (A) ..................................................................... 18:203A Model State Water Act for Great Lakes Management: Explanationand Text.

Joseph L. Sax (A ) ..................................................................... 18:219

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

GREAT LAKES (continued)Binding Ties, Tying Bonds: International Options for Constraints onGreat Lakes Diversions.

Robert J. Sugarman (A) .......................................................... 18:239GREECE (SEE ALSO FOREIGN INVESTMENT)

Foreign Investment Incentives in the Developing World. TheLegislation of Greece, Egypt, Pakistan, Thailand, and the Republic ofChina.

Paul Stephen Dempsey (A) ..................................................... 11:575HAITI (SEE ALSO IMMIGRATION)

Political Asylum for the Haitians?M ichael C.P. Ryan (N) ............................................................ 14:155

HEALTH CARE (SEE ASo MEDICINE)Health Care As A Human Right.

Roger Ritvo, Edward McKinney & Pranab Chatterjee (A)... 15:323HISPANIOLA, ISLE OF (SEE ALSO DIVORCE)

Isle of Hispanida: American Divorce Haven?Robert Steuk (N) ........................................................................ 5:198

HONG KONGThe Changing Face of Hong Kong's International Air TransportRelations.

Gary N. Heilbronn (A) ............................................................ 20:195The Constitutional Relationship Between the Central Government andthe Future Hong Kong Special Administrative Region Government.

Joseph Y.S. Cheng (A) ......................................................... 20:65The Economic Consequences of 1997.

Y.L. W u and Y.C. Jao (A) .......................................................... 20:17Extradition and the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

Janice M .Brabyn (A) .............................................................. 20:169The Future of Hong Kong: Toward 1997 and Beyond, Hungdah Chiu,Y.C. Jao & Y.L. Wu, eds.

DavidM . Corwin (BR) ............................................................ 20:279Hong Kong 1997: Practical Aspects.

Benjamin P. Fishburne, 111 (A) ............................................ 20:43Introduction to the Hong Kong Edition: Transfer of Sovereignty.

Hungdah Chiu (IA) ................................................................. 20:1Nationality Aspects of the Hong Kong Settlement.

Robin M . W hite (A) ................................................................. 20:225

19991 563

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

HONG KONG (continued)Settlement of the Macao Issue: Distinctive Features of Beijing'sNegotiating Behavior.

Jaw-ling Joanne Chang (A) .................................................... 20:253Structure of the Hong Kong Special Administrative RegionGovernment.

Em ily Lau (A ) ............................................................................ 20:51Strung Up or Shot Down?: The Death Penalty in Hong Kong and Chinaand Implications for Post-1997.

Andrew Scobell (A) ................................................................. 20:147Towards a Jurisprudence of a Third Kind - "One Country, TwoSystems."

Denis Chang (A) ................................................................... 20:99Where Two Legal Systems Collide: An American ConstitutionalScholar in Hong Kong.

M ichael C. Davis (A) .............................................................. 20:127The Draft Basic Law of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Regionof the People's Republic of China for Solicitation of Opinions.

(L ) ............................................................................................. 20:30 1HOSTAGES

Hostage Rights: Law and Practice in Throes of Evolution.H .H.A . Cooper (A) .................................................................... 15:61

HUMAN RIGHTSThe Anthropocentric Theory of International Law as a Basis for HumanRights.

S. Prakash Sinha (A) ............................................................... 10:469Applicability of the European Convention on Human Rights to NorthernIreland.

David R. Lowry and Robert J. Spjut (A) ................................. 10:251Christian Constitutions: Do They Protect Internationally RecognizedHuman Rights and Minimize the Potential for Violence Within ASociety?

S.I. Strong (A ) ............................................................................. 29:1Combating the Problems of Human Rights Abuses and InadequateOrgan Supply Through Presumed Donative Consent.

Christian M . W illiams (N) ....................................................... 26:315Contemplating Sinha's Anthropocentric Theory of International Law asa Basis for Human Rights.

Eugene Fryer (R) ..................................................................... 12:575

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

HUMAN RIGHTS (continued)Enhancing Global Human Rights, by the Council on Foreign Relations.

Carl Esterhay (BR) .................................................................. 12:249Guide to International Human Rights Practice, Hurst Hannam, ed.

Frederic M . Wilf (BR) ............................................................. 16:485Health Care as a Human Right

Roger Ritvo, Edward McKinney, & Pranab Chatterjee ......... 10:.323The Helsinki Human Rights Conference.

Constance Coughlin (C) .......................................................... 10:511Human Rights and Development: Using Advanced Technology toPromote Human Rights in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Jennifer Myers (A) ................................................................. 30:343Human Rights and Wrongs: The United States and the ILO-A ModemMorality Play.

Bruch L. Rockwood (A) ........................................................... 10:359Human Rights and United States Foreign Relations: An Overview.

Patricia M .Derian (A) ............................................................ 10:243Human Rights in Iran.

Richard Cottam (C) ................................................................. 12:121Human Rights in a One-Party State, by the International Commission ofJurists.

David C. Indiano (BR) ............................................................ 11:451Humanitarian Law, El Salvador, and Protocol II: Do These EqualSubstantive International Law?

E. M arie Wheeler (N) .............................................................. 21:203International Human Rights Norms and Soviet Abuse of Psychiatry.

Amy Young-Anawaty (A) ......................................................... 10:785International Laws as Integrators and Measurement in Human RightsDebates.

DavidA. Funk (A) ..................................................................... 3:123Law and the Idea of Mankind.

Hany W. Jones (A) ........................... 2:5Patriots and Terrorists: Reconciling Human Rights with World Order.

Nicholas N. Kittrie (A) ............................................................ 13:291Sigurjdnsson v. Iceland: The European Court of Human Rights Expandsthe Negative Right of Association.

W. Kearns Davis, Jr. (A) ......................................................... 27:301

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

HUMAN RIGHTS (continued)Toward a New U.S. Human Rights Policy: An Interim Proposal.

Patricia A. Mayne (N) ............................................................. 15:397Universal Functional Requisites of Society: The Unending Quest.

Ovid C. Lewis (A ) .......................................................................... 3:3HUNGARY

The E.C.: A Hungarian View Toward 1992.Bela Kadar (A) ........................................................................ 22:269

European Community/Hungary Relations.Donald E. deKieffer (A) ............................................................ 21:55

Forensic Medicine: The State of the Art: Hungary.I. Gyula Fazekas (A) ................................................................... 2:19

ILOHuman Rights and Wrongs: The United States and the ILO - A ModemMorality Play.

B.L. Rockwood (A) .................................................................. 10:359IMCO (SEE ALSO ENVIRONMENT)

IMCO: An Environmentalist's Perspective.Eldon V.C. Greenburg (A) ...................................................... 18:131

IMMIGRATIONThe Amiable Fiction - Alien Commuters Under Our Immigration Laws.

Charles Gordon (A) .................................................................. 1:124The Immigrant Investor Program: Cleaning Up Canada's Act.

James DeRosa (N) ................................................................... 27:359Flickering Lamp Beside the Golden Door- Immigration, theConstitution, and Undocumented Aliens in the 1990s.

Michael R. Curran (A) .............................................................. 30:57International Law and the Movement of Persons Between States, byGuy S. Goodwin-Gill.

Helen R. Thompson (BR) ........................................................ 11:635Judicial Review of the Administrative Denial of EmploymentCertification to Aliens.

Anastasius Efstratiades (N) ....................................................... 7:229Mental Illness Exclusions in United States Immigration Procedure.

James E. M oore (N) .................................................................... 3:71Political Asylum for the Haitians?

Michael C.P. Ryan (N) ............................................................ 14:155

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

IMMIGRATION (continued)The Impact of the Treaty of Rome Upon Certain Aspects of the UnitedKingdom's Immigration Law.

Reginald W. Curtis (A) ............................................................ 18:443IMPORTS

Aspects of the Legal, Political and Policy Issues That Will Confront theU.S.-Japan Trading Community During the Remainder of the 1980s.

W illiam L. Dickey (A) ............................................................. 15:445The Industrial Targeting Practices of Japan and the Domestic MachineTool Industry.

Brian A. Googins and James A. Greene (A) .......................... 15:469Injured Industries, Imports, and Industrial Policy: A Comparison ofUnited States and Japanese Practices.

H. William Tanaka and B. Jenkins Middleton (A) ................. 15:419The International and National Protection of Movable Cultural Property,by Sharon A. Williams.

Patricia Bovan (BR) ................................................................ 11:216Labeling Imported Products with Country of Origin.

George R. Royer (N) .................................................................... 1:29Strategic Planning for the Protection of U.S. Technology andIntellectual Property in the Trade Relationship Between the UnitedStates and Japan.

Warren G. Shimeall (C) .......................................................... 15:611INDIA

Constitutional Fairness or Fraud on the Constitution?: CompensatoryDiscrimination in India.

E l. Prior (A ) ............................................................................ 28:63Detention of the Unconvicted in Patna, India.

Frederick L Taft (A) .................................................................. 5:155INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY

Creating Data Protection Legislation in the United States: AnExamination of Current Legislation in the European Union, Spain, andthe United States.

Jennifer M .Myers (N) ............................................................ 29:109International Intellectual Property Protections for Living Matter.Biotechnology, Multinational Conventions, and the Exception forAgriculture.

David G. Scalise and Daniel Nugent (A) ................................. 27:83

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INTL L.

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY (continued)Strategic Planning for the Protection of U.S. Technology andIntellectual Property in the Trade Relationship Between the UnitedStates and Japan.

Warren G. Shimeall (C) .......................................................... 15:611INTELLIGENCE

Too Many Secrets: Challenges to the Control of Strong Crypto and theNational Security Perspective.

J. Terrence Stender (N) ........................................................... 30:287INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW

The Enforcement of International Criminal Law: Fact or Fiction?Robert A. Friedlander (A) ........................................................ 17:79

The Foundations of International Criminal Law: A Present-Day Inquiry.Robert A. Friedlander (A) ......................................................... 15:13

Hostage Rights: Law and Practice in Throes of Evolution.H .H.A . Cooper (A) .................................................................... 15:61

International Criminal Law: Civitas Maxima.Gerhard O.W. Mueller (I) ........................................................... 15:1

Introductory Remarks: International Criminal Law.D enis Szabo (I) ............................................................................ 15:9

The Islamic Criminal Justice System, by M. Cherif Bassiouni.Al Cowger, Jr. (BR) ................................................................. 15:179

Judicial Interpretation of Silence: The Criminal Evidence Order of 1988.Thomas P. Quinn, Jr. (N) ........................................................ 26:365

Legal Assistance in Criminal Cases and Some Important Questions ofExtradition.

Valery Shupilov (A) ................................................................. 15:127The Penal Characteristics of Conventional International Criminal Law.

M. CherifBassiouni (A) ............................................................ 15:27Russian Organized Crime.

Kevin M ason (BR) .................................................................. 30:341State Department Determinations of Political Offenses: Death Knell forthe Political Offense Exception in Extradition Law.

Kenneth S. Sternberg and David L. Skelding (N) ................... 15:137The Theoretical Basis of Punishment in International Criminal Law.

Dr. Farooq Hassan (A) ............................................................. 15:39

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW (continued)Should the U.S. Constitution's Treaty-Making Power Be Used as theBasis for Enactment of Domestic Legislation?

Robert A. Friedlander (A) ....................................................... 18:267Aggression Against Authority: The Crime of Oppression, Politicide, andOther Crimes Against Human Rights.

Jordan J. Paust (A) ................................................................. 18:283INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS (sEE ALSO FOREIGN INVESTMENT)

Banks' Rights of Setoff in Latin American Countries.Lewis M . Smoley (A) ............................................................... 13:141

Bulgarian Trade and Investment A Realistic AssessmentDavidA. Levy (A) .................................................................... 27:203

Economic Policies for the 1980s.Mordechai E. Kreinen (A) ...................................................... 12:425

Financial Institutions in the International Monetary System.Jonathan DavidAronson (A) .................................................. 12:341

Foreign Direct Investment Regulations: The Effectuating Calculus.John N. Bulick, Jr. (C) ................................................................. 1:45

From International Laws to International Economic Community Law.David.A. Funk (A) ................................................................... 4:3

The Impact of Inflation and Devaluation on Private Legal Obligations,by Eliyahu Hirschberg.

Shayne Tulsky (BR) ................................................................. 11:213International Sanctions in Theory and Practice.

M argaret Doxey (A) ................................................................ 15:273Lateral Movements: Legal Flexibility and Foreign InvestmentRegulation in China.

Peter Howard Come (A) ......................................................... 27:247A Look at Questionable or Illegal Payments by American Corporationsto Foreign Government Officials.

Richard Verri (N) ...................................................................... 8:496Money and Exchange Dealing in International Banking, by Nigel R.L.Hudson.

Kenneth S. Ginsburg (BR) ...................................................... 13:433National Sovereignty and International Cooperation Over ExchangeArrangements.

J.R. Artus and A.D. Crockett (A) ............................................ 12:327The Redefinition of the Official Monetary Aggregates.

Henry C. Wallich and Warren T. Trepata (A) ....................... 12:405

1999] 569

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS (continued)Substitution in the International Monetary System.

Sir Joseph Gold (A) ................................................................. 12:265Trade Without Money: Barter and Countertrade, by Leo G. Welt.

Richard M. Wortman (BR) ...................................................... 19:469The United States and Canada: A Comparison of CorporateNonrecognition Provisions.

Catherine Brown and Christine Manolakas (A) ....................... 30:1INTERNATIONAL FINANCE

Commentary on Liechtenstein Company Law.Herbert Batliner (A) ................................................................ 14:613

Enforcement of International Contracts by Arbitration: RecentDevelopments.

Hans Bagner (A) ..................................................................... 14:573Impasse and Accommodation: The Protection of Private Direct ForeignInvestment in the Developing States.

Lyman H. Heine (A) ................................................................ 14:465Import Restraints and Reindustrialization: The Case of the U.S. SteelIndustry.

Joel B. Dirlan and Hans Mueller (A) ..................................... 14:419International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes.

Gita Gopal (A) .................................................................... 14:591Protectionism and Steel: The Need to Replace Outworn Perspectives.

Bela Gold (A) .......................................................................... 14:447Rejoinder to Professor Gold.

Joel B. Dirlan and Hans Mueller (R) ..................................... 14:459Securities Fraud Over the Internet: The Flies in the Ointment and AHope of Fly Paper.

Kevin M ason (C) ...................................................................... 30:489Trade Without Money: Barter and Countertrade, by Leo G. Welt.

Richard M. Wortman (BR) ...................................................... 19:469Trigger Prices Under Floating Exchange Rates: A Dubious Experimentin Trade Policy.

Gerhard Rosegger (A) ............................................................. 14:493INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND

Address to the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund,Belgrade, Yugoslavia.

G .W .M iller (I) ......................................................................... 12:255

570 [Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND (continued)Legal Technique in the Creation of a New International Reserve AssetSpecial Drawing Rights and the Amendment of the Articles ofAgreement of the International Monetary Fund.

Joseph Gold (A) ......................................................................... 1:105INTERNATIONAL TAX

Australian Taxation of Companies and Shareholders: ImputationArrives Down Under.

Paul E. Von Essen (A) ............................................................... 19:73Choosing to Do Business Through a Foreign Branch or A ForeignSubsidiary: A Tax Analysis.

Scott P. Borsack (N) ................................................................ 19:393Information Disclosure and Competent Authority: A Proposal.

Gregory J. DeGulis (N) .......................................................... 17:485International Tax Planning Offshore Style: An Update.

Paul M. Kiffner & William D. Rohrer (A) ............................. 17:435The Simplification of Subpart F.

Daniel P. Shepherdson (N) .................................................... 17:459INTERNATIONAL TRADE

Analysis of the Newly Amended Commercial Code of Japan.Mark Edward Foster (RD) ...................................................... 15:587

Anti-dumping Law and Practice in the United States and the EuropeanCommunities, by Edwin A. Vermulst

DavidD. Knoll (BR) ................................................................ 20:293Anti-trust Aspects of U.S.-Japanese Trade.

W ilbur L. Fugate (A) ............................................................... 15:505Apartheid and Black Labor in South Africa: Applying Section 307 ofthe Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act to Goods Produced by Black SouthAfricans.

Frederic S. Nathan, Jr. (N) ..................................................... 19:421The Application of Section One of the Sherman Act to East-West TradeResale Restriction.

Peter B. Fitzpatrick (A) ........................................................... 11:117Aspects of the Legal, Political, and Policy Issues That Will Confront theU.S.-Japan Trading Community During the Remainder of the 1980s.

W illiam L. Dickey (A) ............................................................. 15:445

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

INTERNATIONAL TRADE (continued)Attempts to Liberalize International Trade In Agriculture and theProblem of the External Aspects of the Common Agricultural Policy ofthe European Economic Community.

J. Kodwo Bentil (A) ................................................................. 17:335Bias in the International Trade Administration: The Need for ImpartialDecisionmakers in United States Anti-Dumping Proceedings.

M ichael A. Lawrence (A) ............................................................ 26:1Can United States Anti-Dumping Law Be Effectively Applied toCountertrade Transactions?

Steven Rinaldi (N) ................................................................... 19:441The Conflict of Laws and the Extraterritorial Application of theSherman Act.

Lawrence William Nelson, Sr. (A) ............................................ 4:164Cargo Reservation: In Search of a Standard Under Public Internationaland U.S. Municipal Law.

Thomas Sauermilch (A) ........................................................... 17:43An Evaluation of the Proposed Fair Trade In Financial Services Act.

Dennis Bower (N) .................................................................... 27:407European Community/Hungary Relations.

Donald E. deKieffer (A) ............................................................ 21:55Export Controls: Extraterritorial Conflict - The Dilemma of the HostCountry Employee.

Robert Y. Stebbings (A) ........................................................... 19:303Going Bananas Over E.E.C. Preferences?: A Look at the Banana TradeWar and the WTO's Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governingthe Settlement of Disputes.

Zsolt K. Bessk6 ....................................................................... 28:265The Industrial Cooperation Contract in East-West Trade.

Andrej Szumdnski (A) ................................................................ 21:87Joint Ventures and Technology Transfers.

Bill F. Kryzda (S) ..................................................................... 12:549Joint Ventures in the U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, and Poland.

Georgios N. Boukaouris (A) ....................................................... 21:1Legal Aspects of Appointment and Termination of Foreign Distributorsand Representatives.

H enry T. King, Jr. (A) ............................................................... 17:91

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

INTERNATIONAL TRADE (continued)Licensing Impact of Foreign Policy Motivated Retroactive Re-exportRegulations.

Brian G. Brunsvold and James M. Bagarazzi (A) .................. 15:289Market Safeguards Against Import Competition: Article XIX of theGeneral Agreement on Tariffs and Trade.

Thomas Sauermilch (A) ............................................................ 14:83New E.E.C. Safeguard Measures: Regulation 288/82.

Selma M. Lussenburg (A) ........................................................ 16:337Private Rights of Action Against Foreign Entities Under the UnitedStates Mineral Leasing Acts.

Robert G. Berger (A) ............................................................... 15:343Reference Manual on Doing Business in Latin America.

M ichael Burros (BR) ............................................................... 12:653Sino-Japanese Trade in the Post-Normalization Era.

David Leng and Shao-chuan Leng (A) ................................... 11:267Soviet Efforts to Achieve Economic Integration: The Causes,Consequences, and Prospects.

Robert M .Rosh (A) ................................................................... 21:67Strategic Planning for the Protection of U.S. Technology andIntellectual Property in the Trade Relationship Between the UnitedStates and Japan.

Warren G. Shimeall (C) .......................................................... 15:611Taking Peacetime Trade Sanctions to the Limit: The Soviet PipelineEmbargo.

Gary H. Perlow (A) ............................... 15:253The Application of Section One of the Sherman Act to East-West TradeResale Restriction.

Peter B. Fitzpatrick (A) ........................................................... 11:117Trade Friction, Administrative Guidance, and Antimonopoly Law inJapan.

Kozo Toyama, Norifwni Tateishi, & John Palenberg (C) ...... 15:601Trade Without Money: Barter and Countertrade, by Leo G. Welt.

RichardM. Wortman (BR) ...................................................... 19:469U.S. Policies Affecting International Agricultural Trade.

Leo V. M ayer (A) ..................................................................... 17:421INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS

The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal, 1981-83.Andrew W. Markley (BR) ....................................................... 17:315

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

INTERNATIONAL TRIBUNALS (continued)Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal: A Policy Analysis of the ExpropriationCases.

Steven R. Swanson (A) ............................................................ 18:307INTERNET

Securities Fraud Over the Internet The Flies in the Ointment and AHope of Fly Paper.

Kevin M ason (C) ...................................................................... 30:489Regulating the Internet: The New Battle Against Child Pornography.

Lesli C. Esposito (N) ............................................................... 30:541INTERVENTION

American Bombing of Libya: An International Legal Analysis.Gregory F. Intoccia (A) .......................................................... 19:177

The April 14, 1986 Bombing of Libya: Act of Self-Defense or Reprisal?Jeffrey A. McCredie (A) .......................................................... 19:215

Preliminary Thoughts on Some Unresolved Questions Involving theLaw of Anticipatory Self-Defense.

RexJ. Zedalis (A ) .................................................................... 19:129Self-Help in Combating State-Sponsored Terrorism: Self-Defense andPeacetime Reprisals.

Guy B. Roberts (A) .................................................................. 19:243Introduction: Self-Judging Self-Defense.

Oscar Schachter (A) ................................................................ 19:121IRAN

Human Rights in Iran.Richard Cottam (C) ................................................................. 12:121

The Iran-United States Claims Tribunal, 1981-83.Andrew W. Markley (BR) ....................................................... 17:315

United States Military Exports and the Arms Export Control Act of1976: The F-16 Sale to Iran.

Henry E. Billingsley, II (N) ....................................................... 9:407Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal: A Policy Analysis of the ExpropriationCases.

Steven R. Swanson (A) ............................................................ 18:307IRELAND

Applicability of the European Convention on Human Rights to NorthernIreland.

David R. Lowry and Robert J. Spjut (A) ................................. 10:251

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

ISRAEL (SEE ALSO MIDDLE EAST)An Analysis of Egyptian Peace Policy Toward Israel: From Resolution242 (1967) to the 1979 Peace Treaty.

M. CherifBassiouni (A) .............................................................. 12:3Antiquities in Israel in a Maze of Controversy.

Shoshana Bennan (A) ............................................................. 19:343Forensic Medicine: The State of the Art: Israel.

Heinrich Karplus (A) .................................................................. 2:23Jerusalem: Legal and Political Dimensions in a Search for Peace.

M ark Gruhin (N) ..................................................................... 12:169Israeli Occupation: International Law and Political Realities, by D.E.George.

Mark D. Arons (BR) ................................................................ 13:541JAPAN

Analysis of the Newly Amended Commercial Code of Japan.Mark Edward Foster (RD) ...................................................... 15:587

Antimonopoly Law of Japan: Relating to International Transactions.Mitsuo Matsushita and James L. Hildebrand (A) .................... 4:124

Anti-trust Aspects of U.S.-Japanese Trade.Wilbur L. Fugate (A) ............................................................... 15:505

Aspects of the Legal, Political, and Policy Issues That Will Confront theU.S.-Japan Trading Community During the Remainder of the 1980s.

William L. Dickey (A) ............................................................. 15:445Corporate Divorce - Japanese Style.

Henry T. King, Jr. (C) ............................................................... 6:250Corporate Taxation in Japan.

H.W .T. Pepper (A) ..................................................................... 6:237Doing Business in Japan, edited by Robert J. Ballon.

Gregory J. Lavelle (BR) ............................................................ 6:307An Evaluation of the Proposed Fair Trade In Financial Services Act.

Dennis Bower (N) .................................................................... 27:407Establishing a Joint Venture Company in Japan: Legal Considerations.

James L. Hildebrand (A) ........................................................... 6:199Fair Trade Commission vs. MITI: History of the Conflicts Between theAntimonopoly Policy and the Industrial Policy in the Post-War Period ofJapan.

Seichi Yoshikawa (A) .............................................................. 15:489

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

JAPAN (continued)The Fifth Liberalization of Capital Movements into Japan.

John E. Codrea (N) ................................................................... 6:257The Indigenization of Constitutionalism in the Japanese Experience.

Christopher A. Ford ................................................................... 28:3The Industrial Targeting Practices of Japan and the Domestic MachineTool Industry.

Brian A. Googins and James A. Greene (A) .......................... 15:469Injured Industries, Imports, and Industrial Policy: A Comparison ofUnited States and Japanese Practices.

H. William Tanaka and B. Jenkins Middleton (A) ................. 15:419Introduction to Joint Venturing in Japan.

Francis T. Vaughan (A) ............................................................ 6:178Japan: An Introduction.

T. Albert Yamada (I) ................................................................ 15:415Japan's Quantitative Restrictions of the Importation of AgriculturalProducts.

James M . Lyons (A) ................................................................. 15:569Japanese Business Ethics.

Scott K. Goldsmith (N) .............................................................. 6:257The Judicial System of Japan.

Richard M. Lorenzo (N) ............................................................ 6:294Lifting the Export Ban on Alaskan Oil: A Trilateral Trade Proposal.

Steven R. Perles (A) ................................................................ 15:527Negotiating Contracts with the Japanese.

Elliott H ahn (A) ....................................................................... 14:377Sino-Japanese Trade in the Post-Normalization Era.

David Leng and Shao-chuan Leng (A) ................................... 11:267Strategic Planning for the Protection of U.S. Technology and IntellectualProperty in the Trade Relationship Between the United States and Japan.

Warren G. Shimealll (C) ......................................................... 15:611Trade Friction, Administrative Guidance, and Antimonopoly Law inJapan.

Kozo Toyama, Norifumi Tateishi, and JohnPalenberg (C) ........................................................................... 15:601

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

JEWISH LAWFraud on the Surviving Spouse in Jewish and American Law: A ModelChapter for a Jewish Law Casebook.

Jeffrey L Roth (A) ................................................................... 28:101LABOR

Withered Giants: Mexican and U.S. Organized Labor and the NorthAmerican Agreement on Labor Cooperation.

Frederick Englehart (N) ......................................................... 29:389LANGUAGE

Esperanto: An International Language for International Law.RalphL. Harry (A) .................................................................. 10:817

Language Rights and Quebec Bill 101.Clifford Savren (N) .................................................................. 10:543

LATIN AMERICAThe Andean Legal Order: A New Community Law, by Francis V.Garcia-Amador.

Craig E. Chapman (BR) .......................................................... 11:461Banks' Rights of Setoff in Latin American Countries.

Lewis M. Smoley (A) ............................................................... 13:141Contributions of Lesser Developed Nations to International Law: TheLatin American Experience.

Frank Griffith Dawson (A) ....................................................... 13:37Dominican Republic Investment Opportunities: A Survey.

Luis O .Beltr6 (N) .................................................................... 13:165El Conflicto Honduras-El Salvador Y El Orden Juridico Intemacional,by James Rowles.

Luis 0. Beltrg (BR) .................................................................. 13:251Forensic Medicine: The State of the Art- Latin America.

Eduardo Vargas (A) .................................................................... 2:28The Future of Arbitration in Latin America: A Study of its RegionalDevelopment.

Bruce G. Rinker (N) .................................................................. 8:480The Next Decade in Latin America: Anticipating the Future from thePast.

Robert J. Radway (A) .................................................................. 13:3Reference Manual on Doing Business in Latin America, edited byDonald R. Shea, et al.

Michael Burros (BR) ............................................................... 12:653

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

LATIN AMERICA (continued)Towards a Better Understanding of Latin America.

Dr. Tatiana B. de M aekelt (I) ...................................................... 13:1LAW IN DEVELOPMENT

Law in Development: On Tapping, Gourding, and Serving Palm Wine.Maxwell 0. Chibundu (A) ...................................................... 29:167

LAW OF THE SEACanada and the United States: Dispute Settlement and the InternationalJoint Commission - Can This Experience Be Applied to Law of the SeaIssues.

M axwell Cohen (A) ..................................................................... 8:69The Law and the Sea: An Introductory Comment.

Oliver C. Schroeder (I) .................................................................. 8:5The Modem Law of the Sea: Framework for the Protection andPreservation of the Marine Environment.

Moira L. McConnell and Edgar Gold (A) ................................ 23:83The Polar Regions and the Law of the Sea.

Joan E. M oore (N) ..................................................................... 8:204Navigation Through Three Straits in the Middle East: Effects on theUnited States of Being a Nonparty to the 1982 Convention on the Lawof the Sea.

Ronnie Ann Wainwright (A) .................................................... 18:361Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea.

M ilenko M ilic (A) ...................................................................... 8:168The Third United Nations Law of the Sea Conference: The CaracusSession and its Aftermath.

Roster of Members, Subcommittee on International Law& Relations (A ) .......................................................................... 8:13

Third United Nations Law of the Sea Conference: The Current Statusand the "Informal Single Negotiating Text."

Roster of Members, Subcommittee on International Law& R elations .................................................................................. 8:33

LIBYAAmerican Bombing of Libya: An International Legal Analysis.

Gregory F. Intoccia (A) .......................................................... 19:177The April 14, 1986 Bombing of Libya: Act of Self-Defense or Reprisal?

Jeffrey A. M cCredie (A) .......................................................... 19:215

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

LIECHTENSTEINCommentary on Liechtenstein Company Law.

Herbert Batliner (A) ................................................................ 14:613MANILA CONFERENCE

Personal Reflections on the Manila Conference on the Law of theWorld.

J.W . Samuels (C) ..................................................................... 10:503MAYAGUEZ (SEE PUEBLO)MEDICINE (SEE ALSO FORENSIC MEDICINE)

Combating the Problems of Human Rights Abuses and InadequateOrgan Supply Through Presumed Donative Consent.

Christian M. Williams (N) ....................................................... 26:315Drug Synergism and Potential Medical Liability.

John C. Slovensky (C) ............................................................... 3:207Forensic Medicine: The State of the Art Israel.

Heinrich Karplus (A) .................................................................. 2:23Health Care as a Human Right.

Roger Ritvo, Edward McKinney & Pranab Chatterjee .......... 10:323Malpractice: The Administration of the Murphy Trade Practices Act, byV.G. Venturini.

Lawrence R. Bach (BR) ........................................................... 14:643The Moment of Death: An International Medico-Legal ProblemConcerning Human Organ Transplantation.

Byron E. Siegel (A) .................................................................... 2:120MEXICO

Business-Government Relations in Mexico: The Escheverria Challengeto the Existing Development Model.

Edward C. Epstein (A) ............................................................ 12:525U.S.-Mexican Relations: A Need for Mutual Understanding.

Ambassador Julian Nava (I) ................................................... 12:449Mexico: Economic Independence as a Basis for Ties with the UnitedStates.

Hope Camp, Jr. (I) ................................................................... 12:453Mexico's 1976 Law of Inventions and Trademarks.

Gastdn Ramirez de la Corte and Alan L. Hyde (A) ............... 12:469Respect in Friendship.

Ambassador Hugo B. Margdin (IA) ....................................... 12:455

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

MEXICO (continued)U.S.-Mexican Conflict Over Transboundary Groundwaters: SomeInstitutional and Political Considerations.

Stephen P. M umme (A) ........................................................... 12:505U.S.-Mexican Energy Relations in the 1980s: New Resources VersusOld Dilemmas.

Christopher C. Joyner (A) ...................................................... 12:485Withered Giants: Mexican and U.S. Organized Labor and the NorthAmerican Agreement on Labor Cooperation.

Frederick Englehart (N) ......................................................... 29:389MIDDLE EAST

An Analysis of Egyptian Peace Policy Toward Israel: From Resolution242 (1967) to the 1979 Peace Treaty.

M . CherifBassiouni (A) .............................................................. 12:3Economic Implications of the Peace Treaty Between Egypt and Israel.

D avid Aviel (A ) .......................................................................... 12:57Effects of Peace in the Middle East on Trade with the United States.

Robert M . Campbell (A) ............................................................ 12:27Introduction (Vol. 12:1).

A llan G erson (I) ........................................................................... 12:1Jerusalem: Legal and Political Dimensions in a Search for Peace.

M ark Gruhin (N) ..................................................................... 12:169Middle East Legal Systems, by Sayed Hassan Amin.

M ark A. Sindler (BR) .............................................................. 18:529Navigation Through Three Straits in the Middle East: Effects on theUnited States of Being a Nonparty to the 1982 Convention on the Lawof the Sea.

Ronnie Ann Wainwright (A) .................................................... 18:361Self-Determination in International Law: The Palestinians.

John A. Colina (N) .................................................................. 12:137Symposium Retrospective - Reflections on Reform: Considering LegalFoundations for Peace and Prosperity in the Middle East.

Hiram E. Chodosh (A) ........................................................... 31:427MILITARY LAW

The Application of the UCMJ to Dereliction of Duty Cases: A CaseStudy in Guam

F.U. Yuzon (RD ) ...................................................................... 13:591

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

MINERALS AND MININGIssues Affecting Trade and Investment in Non-Fuel Minerals.

Guy F. Erb (A) ........................................................................... 8:429Deep Ocean Mining: Beginning of a New Era.

John M .M urphy (A) .................................................................... 8:46Private Rights of Action Against Foreign Entities tUnder the UnitedStates Mineral Leasing Acts.

Robert G. Berger (A) ............................................................... 15:343The Worlds of Coal-The Perspectives from the U.S.A.

RichardL. Gordon (A) ............................................................ 10:659MONROE DOCTRINE

The Monroe Doctrine in the 1980s: International Law, Unilateral Policy,or Outdated Anachronism.

David D. Carto (N) .................................................................. 13:203MULTINATIONAL

Is the SEC the Appropriate Federal Agency for Policing Bribery ofForeign Nationals by Multinational Public Corporations?

lisa M . Klein (N) ...................................................................... 13:517Multinational Business: New Approaches to Financing and StructuringVentures.

Lewis D. Solomon (A) ............................................................. 12:363Multinational Corporations: A Framework of Law for the EuropeanCommunity.

M orris H. W olff (A) ................................................................... 8:468Multinational Corporations and Emerging World Order.

Lewis D. Solomon (C) ............................................................... 8:329Multinationals in Brazil.

J.M .Pinheiro Neto (A) .............................................................. 8:311NAFTA

A Comparative Analysis of Proposals for the Legal Protection ofComputerized Databases: NAFTA vs. The European Communities.

W . Joseph M elnik (N) ................................................................ 26:57The Broad Strokes of International Constitutionalism and Its Effects onthe NAFTA Regime.

EdwardAdam (A) ................................................................... 27:557NAFTA Chapter 19 or the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body: AHobson's Choice for Canada?

Michael S. Valihora (A) ......................................................... 30:447

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

NAMIBIAThe Relationship Between International Law and Municipal Law inLight of the Constitution of the Republic of Namibia.

D .J. D evine (A) ........................................................................ 26:295Settlement of the Namibian Dispute: The United States Role in Lieu ofU.N. Sanctions.

Deneice C. Jordan-Walker (N) ............................................... 14:543NATIONAL SECURITY

Too Many Secrets: Challenges to the Control of Strong Crypto and theNational Security Perspective.

J. Terrence Stender (N) ........................................................... 30:287NEO-STOIC INTERNATIONAL LAW

Preaching Propriety to Princes: Grotius, Lipsius, and Neo-StoicInternational Law.

Christopher A. Ford (A) ......................................................... 28:313NEPA

Governmental Hypocrisy and the Extraterritorial Application of NEPA.Silvia M . Riechel (N) ............................................................... 26:115

NEUTRALITYPermanent Neutrality and Collective Security: The Case of Switzerlandand the United Nations Sanctions Against Southern Rhodesia.

Boleslaw A. Boczek (A) ............................................................... 1:75NON-ALIGNMENT

Non-Aligned Nations.Justice E.N.P. Sowah (I) .......................................................... 13:439

Recent Developments in the Constitution of Asian Non-AlignedSocialist States.

Chin Kim (A ) ........................................................................... 13:483The Emergence of the Non-Aligned Movement: A View from Belgrade.

Radoslav Stojanovic (II) .......................................................... 13:443NORWAY

Lessons From Norway: The Children's Ombudsman as a Voice forChildren.

Gary B. M elton (A) .................................................................. 23:197NUCLEAR ENERGY (SEE ALSO ENERGY)

A Survey of the United States Treaties and Agreements Involving thePeaceful Uses of Nuclear Energy.

Ann B. Voorhees (N) ................................................................ 10:671

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

NUCLEAR TEST BAN TREATYThe Nuclear Test Ban Treaty in Retrospect.

BernhardB. Bechhoefer (A) ..................................................... 5:125NUREMBERG

"Classical Legal Positivism at Nuremberg" Considered.Neal Koch (C) ............................................................................ 9:161

The Meaning of Nuremberg.Henry T. King, Jr. (S) ............................................................. 30:143

Nuremberg Forty Years After An Introduction.CherifBassiduni (IA) .............................................................. 18:261

Nuremberg and SovreigntyHenry T. King, Jr. (S) .............................................................. 28:135

The Two Worlds of Albert Speer: Reflections of A NurembergProsecutor, by Henry T. King, Jr.

Carolyn L. Speaker (BR) ........................................................ 30:601OCEAN

Access of Land Locked States To and From the Sea.M ilenko M ilic (C) .................................................................... 13:501

Canada and the United States: Dispute Settlement and the InternationalJoint Commission - Can This Experience Be Applied to Law of the SeaIssues?

M axwell Cohen (A) ..................................................................... 8:69The Common Heritage of Mankind: An Assessment.

Mary Victoria White (N) ......................................................... 14:509Control of Sea Resources by Semi-Autonomous States, by Thomas M.Franck.

David C. Indiano (BR) ............................................................ 11:464Deep Ocean Mining: Beginning of a New Era.

JohnM. Murphy (A) .................................................................... 8:46Global and Regional Approaches to the Protection and Preservation ofthe Marine Environment.

Boleslaw Adam Boczek (A) ....................................................... 16:39International Environmental Law: International ConventionsConcerning Oil Pollution at Sea.

Thomas A. Mensah (A) .............................................................. 8:110An International Seabed Authority: The Impossible Dream?

Henry C. Byrum, Jr. (A) .......................................................... 10:621

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

OCEAN (continued)The Law and the Sea: An Introductory Comment.

Oliver C. Schroeder, Jr. (I) ........................................................... 8:5The Law and the Whale: Current Developments in the WhalingControversy.

CarlA. Christol, John R. Schmidhauser,& George 0. Totten (A) ............................................................ 8:149

"Leaving the Corsair's Name to Other Times": How to Enforce theLaw of Sea Piracy in the 21" Century Through Regional InternationalAgreements.

Timothy H. Goodman (N) ....................................................... 31:139The Modem Law of the Sea: Framework for the Protection andPreservation of the Marine Environment

Moira L. McConnell and Edgar Gold (A) ................................ 23:83The Polar Regions and the Law of the Sea.

Joan E. M oore (N) ..................................................................... 8:204Pollution, Politics, and International Law: Tankers at Sea, by R. MichaelM'Gonigle and Mark W. Zacher.

Roy E. Thoman (BR) ............................................................... 13:435The Tuniso-Libyan Continental Shelf Case.

Douglas C. Hodgson (A) ............................................................. 16:1Navigation Through Three Straits in the Middle East: Effects on theUnited States of Being a Nonparty to the 1982 Convention on the Lawof the Sea.

Ronnie Ann Wainwright (A) .................................................... 18:361The Newfoundland Offshore Reference: Federal-Provincial ConflictOver Offshore Energy Resources.

Edward A. Fitzgerald (A) ............................................................ 23:1Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea.

M ilenko M ilic (A) ...................................................................... 8:168The Third United Nations Law of the Sea Conference: The CaracusSession and Its Aftermath.

Roster of Members, Subcommittee on International Law& Relations (A ) ........................................................................... 8:13

Third United Nations Law of the Sea Conference: The Current Statusand the "Informal Single Negotiating Text."

Roster of Members, Subcommittee on International Law& Relations (A ) ........................................................................... 8:33

OCEAN (continued)

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

Treaties as Instruments for Managing Internationally Shared WaterResources: Restricted Sovereignty vs. Community of Property.

Joseph W. Dellapena (A) .......................................................... 26:27The World Court Decision in the Canada-United States Gulf of MaineSeaward Boundary Dispute: A Perspective From Historical Geography.

Louis and Megan DeVorsey (A) ............................................. 18:415OIL

Lifting the Export Ban on Alaskan Oil: A Trilateral Trade Proposal.Steven R. Perles (A) ................................................................ 15:527

The Need for Comprehensive Legislation in the Russian Oil and GasIndustries.

Laura A. Wakefield (N) .......................................................... 29:149Proposed Changes in Federal Income Tax Credits for Oil and GasPayments.

John L. Kramer (A) ................................................................... 12:97ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN STATES

The OAS & Quest for International Cooperation.L. Ronald Scheman (A) ............................................................. 13:83

PALESTINEForeign Private Investment in Palestine Revisited. An Analysis of theRevised Palestinian Investment Law.

David P. Fidler (A) ................................................................ 31:293The Palestinian Basic Law: Embryonic Constitutionalism.

Adrien Katherine Wing (A) .................................................... 31:383Peace and the Political Imperative of Legal Reform in Palestine.

George E. Bisharat (A) .......................................................... 31:253The Role of Law in a Palestinian-Israeli Accommodation.

John Quigley (A) .................................................................... 31:351PALESTINE (continued)

Symposium Retrospective - Reflections on Reform: Considering LegalFoundations for Peace and Prosperity in the Middle East.

Hiram E. Chodosh (A) ........................................................... 31:427PATENT LAW (SEE ALSO INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY)

African Patent Statutes and Technology Transfer.M ark Sklan (A) ................................................................... 10:.55

The Limitation of Copyright and Patents by the Rules for the FreeMovement of Goods in the European Common Market.

Valentine Korah (A) .................................................................... 14:7

1999]

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586 CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L. [Vol. 31:537

PATENT LAW (continued)Mexico's 1976 Law of Inventions and Trademarks.

Gast6n Ramfrez de la Corte andAlan L. Hyde (A) ............... 12:469PERU

Competition Law for Developing Countries: A Proposal for an Anti-trust Regime in Peru.

Spencer Weber Waller and Rafael Muente (A) ...................... 21:159PIRACY

"Leaving the Corsair's Name to Other Times": How to Enforce theLaw of Sea Piracy in the 21" Century Through Regional InternationalAgreements.

Timothy H. Goodman (N) ....................................................... 31:139POLAND

Lay Judges in the Polish Criminal Courts: A Legal and EmpiricalDescription.

Stanislaw Pomorski (A) ............................................................ 7:198Joint Ventures in the U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, and Poland.

Georgios N. Boukaouris (A) ....................................................... 21:1PUEBLO

Pueblo and Mayaguez: A Legal Analysis.Stephan B. Finch, Jr. (A) ............................................................ 8:79

PUERTO RICOFederal District Court in Puerto Rico: A Brief Look at the Court andFederal Handling of Commonwealth Civil Law in Diversity Cases.

David C. Indiano (N) ............................................................... 13:231Harris v. Santiago Rosario.

David C. Indiano & Harry 0. Cook (CN) .............................. 12:641REFUGEES

The Refugee: A Problem of Definition.Austin T. Fragomen, Jr. (A) ........................................................ 3:45

REPRISALReprisal Redux.

James Larry Taulbee and John Anderson (A) ........................ 16:309RHODESIA

Permanent Neutrality and Collective Security: The Case of Switzerlandand the United Nations Sanctions Against Southern Rhodesia.

Boleslaw A. Boczek (A) ............................................................... 1:75

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

ROMANIASocialist Concepts of Sovereignty: The Case for Romania.

Aurel Braun (A) ......................................................................... 7:169RUSSIA

The Need for Comprehensive Legislation in the Russian Oil and GasIndustries.

Laura A. Wakefield (N) ....................... 29:149The New Ivan the Terrible: Problems in International ,CriminalEnforcement and the Specter of the Russian Mafia.

Peter J. Vassalo (N) ............................................................... 28:173Russian Organized Crime.

Kevin M ason (BR) .................................................................. 30:341SANCTIONS

Anarchy Law, East-West, North-South.Jonathan Bingham (I) .............................................................. 15:209

International Sanctions in Theory and Practice.M argaret Doxey (A) ................................................................ 15:273

Licensing Impact of Foreign Policy Motivated Retroactive Re-exportRegulations.

Brian G. Brunsvold and James M. Bagarazzi (A) .................. 15:289Nonaggressive Sanctions in the International Sports Arena.

James A.R. Nafziger (A) .......................................................... 15:329The Purpose of Sanctions.

Donald E. deKieffer (I) ............................................................ 15:205Settlement of the Namibian Dispute: The United States Role in Lieu ofU.N. Sanctions.

Deneice C. Jordon-Walker (N) ............................................... 14:543Taking Peacetime Trade Sanctions to the Limit: The Soviet PipelineEmbargo.

Gary H. Perlow (A) ................................................................. 15:253SAUDI ARABIA

Alternative Legal Structures for Doing Business in Saudi Arabia:Distributorship, Agency, Branch, Joint Venture, and Professional Office.

Frederick W. Taylor, Jr. (A) ..................................................... 12:77SEA (sEE OCEAN)SELF-DETERMINATION

The Archipelagic States Concept and Regional Stability in SoutheastAsia.

Charlotte Ku (A) ...................................................................... 23:463

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

SELF-DETERMINATION (continued)Self-Determination Under International Law: Validity of Claims toSecede.

Ved P. Nanda (I) ...................................................................... 13:257Equal Citizenship, Self-Determination, and the U.S. Statehood Process:A Constitutional and Historical Analysis.

Luis R. Ddvila-Col6n (A) ........................................................ 13:315Minority Indigenous Populations and Their Claims for Self-Determination.

John T. Paxman (N) ................................................................ 21:185The Right of Self-Determination after the Helsinki Accords for theBaltic Nations.

Boris M eissner (A) .................................................................. 13:375Consensual Merger as a Means of State Succession.

Ronald J. Klein (N) .................................................................. 13:413SHERMAN ACT (sEE ALSO INTERNATIONAL TRADE)

The Application of Section One of the Sherman Act to East-West TradeResale Restriction.

Peter B. Fitzpatrick (A) ........................................................... 11:117The Conflict of Laws and the Extraterritorial Application of theSherman Act.

Lawrence William Nelson, Sr. (A) ............................................ 4:164SOCIALISM

Socialist Concepts of Sovereignty: The Case for Romania.Aurel Braun (A) ......................................................................... 7:169

Socialist Legality and Uncensored Literature in the Soviet Union.Kazimierz Grzybowski (A) ...................................................... 10:299

SOUTH AFRICAApartheid and Black Labor in South Africa: Applying Section 307 ofthe Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act to Goods Produced by Black SouthAfricans.

Fredric S. Nathan, Jr. (N) ....................................................... 19:421SOUTHEAST ASIA

The Archipelagic States Concept and Regional Stability in SoutheastAsia.

Charlotte Ku (A) ...................................................................... 23:463SOVIET UNION

Civil Procedure in the U.S.S.R.J. Alex M orton (N) ..................................................................... 7:211

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

SOVIET UNION (continued)Detente or Debacle, edited by Fred Warner Neal.

Kenneth Berman (BR) ............................................................. 11:449International Human Rights Norms and Soviet Abuse of Psychiatry.

Amy Young-Anawaty (A) ......................................................... 10:785Joint Ventures in the U.S.S.R., Czechoslovakia, and Poland.

Georgios N. Boukaouris (A) ....................................................... 21:1Licensing Impact of Foreign Policy Motivated Retroactive Re-exportRegulations.

Brian G. Brunsvold and James M. Bagarazzi (A) .................. 15:289Socialist Legality and Uncensored Literature in the Soviet Union.

Kazimierz Grzybowski (A) ...................................................... 10:299Soviet Efforts to Achieve Economic Integration: The Causes,Consequences, and Prospects.

RobertM. Rosh (A) ................................................................... 21:67The Soviet Lawyer and His System, by George Dana Cameron, Im.

Waldemar J. Wojcik (BR) ....................................................... 11:458Soviet Theory of the Legal Nature of Customary International Law.

Richard J. Erickson (A) ............................................................. 7:148Taking Peacetime Trade Sanctions to the Limit: The Soviet PipelineEmbargo.

Gary H. Perlow (A) ................................................................. 15:253United States-Soviet Commercial Arbitration Under the 1972 TradeAgreement.

J. Alex M orton (N) ..................................................................... 7:121SOVEREIGNTY

Nuremberg and Sovereignty.Henry T. King, Jr. (S) ............................................................. 28:135

SPAINThe Spanish Jury: 1888-1923.

Michael G. Burros (N) ............................................................ 14:177SPECIALTY DOCTINE

The Doctrine of Specialty: A Traditional Approach to the Issue ofStanding.

John J. Barrett, II1 (A) ........................................................... 29:299SPORTS

Nonaggressive Sanctions in the International Sports Arena.James A.R. Nafziger (A) .......................................................... 15:329

1999] 589

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

SUCCESSOR STATESRights and Obligations of Successor States: An Alternative Theory.

Alfred R. Cowger, Jr. (N) ........................................................ 17:285SWITZERLAND

Permanent Neutrality and Collective Security: The Case of Switzerlandand the United Nations Sanctions Against Southern Rhodesia.

Boleslaw A. Boczek (A) ............................................................... 1:75Swiss Bank Secrecy: Its Limits Under Swiss and International Laws.

Oliver Dunant and Michele Wassmer (A) .............................. 20:541Swiss Bank Secrecy Laws and the U.S. International Revenue Service.

Robert Louis Stauter (N) ......................................................... 20:623Switzerland: New Exceptions to Bank Secrecy Laws Aimed at MoneyLaundering and Organized Crime.

M ichdle M oser (N) .................................................................. 27:321TALMUDIC LAW

Fraud on the Surviving Spouse in Jewish and American Law: A ModelChapter for a Jewish Law Casebook.

Jeffrey I. Roth (A) ................................................................... 28:101The Right of Appeal in Talmudic Law.

Arthur Jay Silverstein (A) ........................................................... 6:33TAXATION

The Branch Profits Tax: An Analysis of Its Impact on Stockholders ofU.S.-Owned Foreign Corporations and Its Interrelationship with the U.S.Network of Tax Treaties.

Jeffrey J. Baldassari (N) ......................................................... 20:643Comment, DISC: A Continuing Dilemma.

Nancy Gordon (C) ................................................................... 11:623Corporate Taxation in Japan.

H .W .T. Pepper (A) ..................................................................... 6:237Foreign Acquisition of a United States Business: The TaxConsiderations.

William J. Bricker, Jr. & James M. Boyd, Jr. (A) .................. 11:487International Aspects of Corporate-Shareholder Tax Integration.

George N. Carlson (A) .............................................................. 1:535Proposed Changes in Federal Income Tax Credits for Oil and GasPayments.

John L. Kramer (A) ................................................................... 12:97

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

TAXATION (continued)The United States and Canada: A Comparison of CorporateNonrecognition Provisions.

Catherine Brown and Christine Manolakas (A) ....................... 30:1U.S. Tax Treatment of Gains and Losses Realized on Foreign CurrencyExhange Rate Hedging.

EdwardA. Weinstein (N) ...................... 18:501TELECOMMUNICATIONS

Cultures in Collision: The Interaction of Canadian and U.S. TelevisionBroadcast Policies (Canadian-U.S. Conference on CommunicationsPolicy).

Ellin E. Rosenthal (BR) ........................................................... 16:303Finding a Basis for International Communications Law: The SatelliteBroadcast Example.

Lizbeth Hasse (A) ...................................................................... 22:97The Geostationary Orbit: Legal, Technical, and Political IssuesSurrounding Its Use in World Telecommunications.

Georgetown Space Law Group (A) ........................................ 16:223Institutional Perspectives on the Allocation of Space Orbital Resources:The ITU, Common User Satellite Systems, and Beyond.

Steven A. Levy (A) ................................................................... 16:171International Cooperation and National Sovereignty - Unchanged Roleof National Sovereignty in the Provision of InternationalTelecommunications Services.

Sei Kageyama (A) .................................................................... 16:265Introductory Remarks (Vol. 16:2).

M ark S. Fowler (I) ................................................................... 16:167Liability Limitations in International Data Traffic: The Consequences ofDeregulation.

Tedson J. M eyers (A) .............................................................. 16:203The New World Information Order: A Legal Framework for Debate.

Bryan J. Holzberg (N) ............................................................. 14:387Overcoming the Legal and Historical Obstacles to Privatization: TheTelecommunications Section in Thailand.

Joseph C. Blasko (N) .............................................................. 30:507The Role of International Telecommunications Union for the Promotionof Peace Through Communication Satellites.

James J. M oylan (N) ................................................................... 4:61

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INT'L L.

TELECOMMUNICATIONS (continued)Television Without Frontiers: The European Union's ContinuingStruggle for Cultural Survival.

Shaun P. O'Connell ................................................................ 28:501Third Party Access to Data Obtained via Remote Sensing: InternationalLegal Theory versus Economic and Political Reality.

David A. Greenburg (N) .......................................................... 15:361TERRITORIAL WATERS (SEE OCEAN TERRORISM)

Patriots and Terrorists: Reconciling Human Rights with World Order.Nicholas N. Kittrie (A) ............................................................ 13:291

Self-Help in Combatting State-Sponsored Terrorism: Self-Defense andPeacetime Reprisals.

Guy B. Roberts (A) .................................................................. 19:243Terrorism and National Liberation Movements: Can Rights DeriveFrom Wrongs.

Robert A. Friedlander (Dialogue) ........................................... 13:281THAILAND

Foreign Investment Incentives in the Developing World: TheLegislation of Greece, Egypt, Pakistan, Thailand, and the Republic ofChina.

Paul Stephen Dempsey (A) ..................................................... 11:575Overcoming the Legal and Historical Obstacles to Privatization: TheTelecommunications Section in Thailand.

Joseph C. Blasko (N) .............................................................. 30:507TRADE POLICY

Deconstructing Protectionism: Assessing the Case for a ProtectionistAmerican Trade Policy.

Kirk Kennedy (BR) ................................................................. 28:197TRANSKEI

Nonrecognition of the Independence of Transkei.Donald A. Heydt (A) ................................................................ 10:167

UKRAINEThe Ukrainian Constitution: Interpretation of the Citizens' RightsProvisions.

Richard C.O. Rezie (N) .......................................................... 31:169UNITED KINGDOM

The Impact of the Treaty of Rome Upon Certain Aspects of the UnitedKingdom's Immigration Law.

Reginald W . Curtis (A) ............................................................ 18:443

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

UNITED KINGDOM (continued)Insurance Coverage for Pollution Liability in the United States and theUnited Kingdom: Covering Troubled Waters.

Thomas C. Gilchrist (N) .......................................................... 23:109UNITED NATIONS

The Arab Oil Embargo and United States Pressure Against Chile:Economic and Policia Coercion and the Charter of the United Nations.

Hartmut Brosche (A) ..................................................................... 7:3Considering Our Position: Viewing Information Warfare as a Use ofForce Prohibited by Article 2(4) of the U.N. Charter.

Todd A. M orth (N) ................................................................... 30:567Dag Hammarskj~ld and U Thant: The Evolution of Their Office.

M.G. Kaladharan Nayar (A) ....................................................... 7:36International Sanctions in Theory and Practice.

M argaret Doxey (A) ................................................................ 15:273Permanent Neutrality and Collective Security: The Case of Switzerlandand the United Nations Sanctions Against Southern Rhodesia.

Boleslaw A. Boczek (A) ............................................................... 1:75The Principle of Reciprocity in the United Nations Convention on theRecognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards of 1958.

Young-Joon M ok (A) ............................................................... 21:123

Recent Proposals in the United Nations to Amend the Charter.M ichaelM . Bunter (A) ............................................................ 10:763

Rolling Back History: The United Nations General Assembly and theRight to Cultural Property.

Douglas N. Thomason (A) ........................................................ 22:47Settlement of the Namibian Dispute: The United States Role in Lieu ofU.N. Sanctions.

Deneice C. Jordon-Walker (N) ............................................... 14:543Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea.

M ilenko M ilic (A) ...................................................................... 8:168The Third United Nations Law of the Sea Conference: The CaracasSession and its Aftermath.

Roster of Members, Subcommittee on International Law& Relations (A) ........................................................................... 8:13

Third United Nations Law of the Sea Conference: The Current Statusand the "Informal Single Negotiating Text."

Roster of Members, Subcommittee on International Law& Relations (A) ........................................................................... 8:33

1999]

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CASE W. RES. J. INTL L.

URUGUAY ROUNDThe Uruguay Round and the World Trade Organization: A NewEra Dawns in the Private Law of International Customs andTrade.

Paulsen K. Vandevert (C) ....................................................... 31:107VATICAN

Diplomatic Relations Between the United States and the Holy See.James A. Coriden (A) .............................................................. 19:361

Vatican Politics: The Metapolitique of the Papacy.Francis X. M urphy (A) ............................................................ 19:375

VENEZUELASpecific Performance Under Venezuelan Law.

Sergio J. Galvis (C) ................................................................. 16:437Venezuela: Certain Legal Considerations for Doing Business.

Robert J. Radway (A) ................................................................ 8:289VIETNAM

Beyond Vietnam to Indo-China - The Legal Implications of the UnitedStates Incursions into Cambodia and Laos.

W illiam P. Bobulsky (N) ............................................................ 3:163Children of War The Problems of Amerasian Children in Vietnam.

T. Grant Callery (A) ...................................................................... 6:4WAR

Children of War- The Problems of Amerasian Children in Vietnam.T. Grant Callery (A) ...................................................................... 6:4

Considering Our Position: Viewing Information Warfare as a Use ofForce Prohibited by Article 2(4) of the U.N. Charter.

Todd A. M orth (N) ................................................................... 30:567Controlling the Use of Force: The Charter Regime and the SummitAgreements.

W illiam D. Jackson (C) ............................................................... 7:84Establishing Legal Norms Through Multilateral Negotiations: The Lawsof War.

George H .Aldrich (A) ................................................................... 9:4The Juridical Status of Irregular Combatants Under the InternationalHumanitarian Law of Armed Combat.

W. Thomas Millison and Sally V. Mallison (A) .......................... 9:39Law and Armed Conflict: Some of the Shared Policies.

Harry Almond (A) ..................................................................... 9:175

[Vol. 31:537

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CUMULATIVE SUBJECT INDEX

WAR (continued)The Laws of War and the Angolan Trial of Mercenaries: Death to theDogs of War.

M ike J. H oover (N) .................................................................... 9:323Laws of War The Developing Law of Armed Conflict-Some CurrentProblems.

General Walter Reed (A) ............................................................ 9:17The Legal Ramifications of Misappropriation of GovernmentEquipment in the United States Army During Times of Police Actions.

Benjamin Franklin Pierce and Jonathan A. Tuttle (A) .......... 13:545Revolutionary War, Guerilla Warfare, and International Law.

Charles R. King (A) .............................................................. 4:91A Trial of Generals: Homma, Yamashita, MacArthur, by LawrenceTaylor.

Thomas M .Haney (BR) .......................................................... 15:173Wars of National Liberation: Jus ad Bellum.

Robert E. Gorelick (A) .............................................................. 11:71WHALING

The Law and the Whale: Current Developments in the WhalingControversy.

CarlA. Christol, John R. Schmidhauser, & GeorgeO. Totten (A ) ............................................................................. 8:149

WORKMEN'S COMPENSATIONProposed Federal Workmen's Compensation Legislation: AComparative View.

Russell Crabtree, Edward Mitchell, and IraW eiss (A ) ....................................................................................... 6:121

WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATIONGoing Bananas over E.E.C. Preferences?: A Look at the Banana TradeWar and the WTO's Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governingthe Settlement of Disputes.

Zsolt K. Bessk6 (A) ................................................................. 28:265NAFT7A Chapter 19 or the WTO's Dispute Settlement Body: AHobson's Choice for Canada?

M ichael S. Valihora (A) ......................................................... 30:449The Uruguay Round and the World Trade Organization: A New EraDawns in the Private Law of International Customs and Trade.

Paulsen K. Vandevert (C) ....................................................... 31:107

19991

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596 CASE W. RES. J. INTL L. [Vol. 31:537

ZIMBABWEMinimum Wage Legislation in Developing Countries - Zimbabwe: ACase in Point.

Sue A. Fauber (N) .................................................................... 13:385