Trade law Part 60

Trade law Part 60 in the United States

634
CADENCE v. AVANT!: THE UTSA AND CALIFORNIA TRADE SECRET LAW
Jeff Danley
Berkeley Technology Law Journal
Volume 19, Number 1, Annual Review 2004    p.289 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

635
TRADE TREATY THREATS AND SUB-NATIONAL SOVEREIGNTY: MULTILATERAL TRADE TREATIES AND THEIR NEGLIGIBLE IMPACT ON STATE LAWS
David I. Spector
Hastings International and Comparative Law Review
Volume 27, Number 2, Winter 2004    p.367 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
Advocates of free trade extol the virtues of trade without borders, while opponents decry its abysmal consequences. While debates about the benefits and detriments of free trade seem never-ending, there has been comparatively little discussion of the actual impact of international trade obligations on sub-national components of federal governments. Although the relationship between America’s trade treaties and the policies of state governments has become a more visible issue in international trade, relatively little is known about how these international trade obligations really shape state law-making among the fifty U.S. states. This Note examines how international trade treaties have actually impacted the fifty states of the Union and proposes that although the potential threat to state sovereignty remains real, the actual impact of multilateral trade obligations on states has been negligible.

636
Hong Kong New Trade Marks Law – towards a More Efficient Trade Marks Regime Hong Kong New Trade Marks Law
Vivien Chan
International Journal of Franchising Law
Volume 2, Issue 1, 2004    p.22 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

637
Chinese Law on Trade, Investment and Intellectual Property Rights: A Bibliography of Selected English-Language Materials
Chenglin Liu
International Journal of Legal Information
Volume 32, Number 1, Spring 2004    p.1 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

638
Antitrust and Trade Regulation Law
Michael F. Urbanski, James R. Creekmore, and Ellen S. Moore
University of Richmond Law Review
Volume 38, Number 1, Annual Survey 2003    p.59 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

639
How to Win a World Trade Organization Dispute Based on Non-World Trade Organization Law?
Joost Pauwelyn
Journal of World Trade
Volume 37, Number 6, December 2003    p.997 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

640
Conflict Diamonds, International Trade Regulation, and the Nature of Law
Daniel L. Feldman
University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law
Volume 24, Number 4, Winter 2003    p.835 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

641
International Trade, Law, and Public Health Advocacy
Jason W. Sapsin, Theresa M. Thompson, Lesley Stone, Katherine E. DeLand
Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics
Volume 31, Number 4, Winter 2003    p.546-556 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

642
International Trade Law—Problems of Language and Concepts?
Bruno Zeller
Journal of Law and Commerce
Volume 23, Number 1, 2003-2004    p.39 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

643
The World Trade Organization—Law, Practice, and Policy
KRAJEWSKI, MARKUS
King’s Law Journal
Volume 14, issue 2, 2003    p.283-289 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

644
International Trade and Economic Law and the European Union
O’KEEFFE, SIÚN
King’s Law Journal
Volume 14, issue 2, 2003    p.309-316 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

645
The Greening of Trade Law: International Organizations and Environmental Issues edited by Richard H. Steinberg A Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy (BRIE) Project, Rowman & Littlefield, Publishers, Lanham/Boulder/New York/Oxford, 2002, 324 pp.
DAVID A. GANTZ
World Trade Review
Volume 2, Issue 3, November 2003    p.434-436 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

646
International Regime of Commercial Companies in Argentina and Mercosur
Beatriz Pallares
Stetson Law Review
Volume 32, Number 4, Summer 2003    p.785 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
The need for at least a basic understanding of the commercial law framework of Latin American countries increases as economic globalization intensifies. Accordingly, Professor Beatriz Pallares summarizes and explains the regulation of foreign commercial companies in the countries of Mercosur. Professor Pallares begins this summary and explanation by discussing international corporate law in general and applicable treaties. Professor Pallares then specifically discusses the commercial regimes in Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, and to a large extent, Argentina. Topics of concentration include choice of law; establishing branches, agencies, or representations; habitual trade; performance of isolated acts; capacity to be on trial; transferring the place of business; liability of representatives; and commercial companies of unknown type.

647
The World Trade Organization and Law Enforcement
Steve Charnovitz
Journal of World Trade
Volume 37, Number 5, October 2003    p.817 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

648
Global Trade Law: Challenges and Options for Africa
Olu Fasan
Journal of African Law
Volume 47, Number 2, October 2003    p.143-173 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

649
Attributing the Activities of Corporate Agents Under U.S. Tax Law: A Fresh Look from an Old Perspective
Steven R. Lainoff, Stephen Bates, and Chris Bowers
Georgia Law Review
Volume 38, Number 1, Fall 2003    p.143 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
The growth of the service economy has challenged traditional notions of tax jurisdiction, especially with respect to international transactions. In particular, the use of agents to perform services and the attribution of those activities to principals has confounded courts, tax authorities and practitioners alike. Both common law agency principles and their application by U.S. courts to domestic tax disputes provide a useful contextual background for attribution issues in the international context. Agency attribution arises in three critical areas of the U.S. international tax regime: the inbound U.S. trade or business and U.S. office rules, sourcing provisions and the subpart F rules targeting services. While some common principles infuse each of these areas, their application has been muddled and their contours imprecise. The Supreme Court’s standard in Commissioner v. Bollinger offers a helpful framework for resolving these inconsistencies.


Posted

in

, ,

by

Tags:

Comments

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *