Volume 12
1990-1991
Issue 1
- GATT and the European Community: A Formula for Peaceful Coexistence
- The United States Should Withdraw its Reservations to the Genocide Convention: A Response to Professor Paust's Proposal
- Coordinated Transnational Interaction in Civil Litigation and Arbitration
- The Italian Constitutional Court and the Relationship Between the Italian Legal System and the European Community
- Note, The United States, Israel and their Extradition Dilemma
- Customary International Law: Its Nature, Sources and Status as Law of the United States
- Legal Aid, Public Service and Clinical Legal Education: Future Directions from India and the United States
- Europe: A Single Currency and a Single Central Bank?
Issue 2
- Attributing Acts of Omission to the State
- Treaty Interpretation: The Authority of Interpretive Communities
- Soft Law and the International Law of the Environment
- Japan, SII and the International Harmonization of Domestic Economic Practices
- Legal Remedies and the United Nations' À La Carte Problem
- The Structural Impediments Initiative: An Example of Bilateral Trade Negotiation
Issue 3
- The Unification of Germany and International Law
- Vital Interests and the Law of GATT: An Analysis of GATT's Security Exception
- Article 235 of the Treaty Establishing the European Economic Community: Potential Conflicts Between the Dynamics of Lawmaking in the Community and National Constitutional Principles
- Demoncratic Institutions of Industrial Relations: A Polish Perspective
Issue 4
- The Czechoslovak Approach to the Draft Convention on Jurisdictional Immunitites of States and Their Property
- The Development of the Equal Treatment Principle in the International Debt Crisis
- Negotiating Investment in the GATT: A Call for Functionalism
- Debt, Development, and Human Rights: Lessons from South Africa
- Strategy and Compliance with Bilateral Trade Dispute Settlement Agreements: USTR's Section 301 Experience in the Pacific Basin
- Can Antidumping Law Apply to Trade in Services?
- Note, The Convention for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women: Radical, Reasonable, or Reactionary?