It’s a small world after allBy Robyn DonaldsonNovember 2005Attorneys in the U.S. are learning everyday that their legal practice is extending beyond the borders of this nation.
Letter to the editorJanuary 2005As an admirer of Professor Mark E. Wojcik's intellectual prowess, erudition, good heart, and enthusiasm, I am somewhat concerned that his article, "Chair's column: Restoring belief in international law" is insufficiently cautious, claims more for the concept than it can reasonably bear, confuses good ends with uncertain means, and could foster unfortunate unintended consequences.
Luncheon at Polish ConsulateBy Juliet BoydMay 2005On February 11, 2005 the section council was honored to have its February meeting hosted at the Polish Consulate.
Making the rulemakers play by the rules: Admistrative decision making in the immigration arenaBy Patrick M. KinnallyMay 2005Agencies within the executive branch of government, both on the state and federal level, generally implement statutes entrusted to their administration by the legislative branch either through administrative rulemaking (5 U.S.C. 553) or ad hoc adjudication (5 U.S.C. 554).
Meeting with Supreme Court Justices of the Republic of BuryatiaBy Violeta I. BalanMay 2005On March 22, 2005, a delegation of three Supreme Court Justices from the Republic of Buryatia met with Illinois practitioners, professors and law school students at The John Marshall Law School in Chicago.
Message from the Chair: Global IllinoisBy Mark E. WojcikJune 2005We who live here in Illinois may sometimes forget that our state has important connections to international law, international politics, and the international institutions that facilitate trade and business in the global economy.
Message from the Chair: The importance of international lawBy Mark E. WojcikMarch 2005Classes have begun at The John Marshall Law School, where this semester I am teaching a course in Public International Law and another course in International Criminal Law.
The new currency control regulations in RussiaBy Yevgeniy Tregubenko & Maxim SavostianovNovember 2005The new Law on Currency Control (hereinafter - “the Law”) was adopted by the State Duma (the lower house of the Parliament) on 21 November 2003.
Reform of the United Nations—September 23, 2005By Cindy G. BuysNovember 2005This year, the United Nations celebrates its 60th anniversary. As with any anniversary, the United Nations’s 60th anniversary has been a time for reflection: a time to assess what the United Nations has done well and what it has not done so well.
Risk management strategies for identity preserved grain exportsBy A. Bryan EndresDecember 2005Emerging foreign regulations for imported grain ultimately may result in trace-back liability to U.S. farmers for the commingling of even miniscule amounts of genetically engineered DNA.
The Section Council makes a differenceBy Juliet BoydJune 2005This section has much to offer our members and the broader ISBA community and will continue to pursue its goal to demonstrate its relevance to all aspects of the practice of law.
The snail-paced Doha Round agriculture negotiationsBy Adrian ZenoJune 2005The WTO contained a package of over 20 multilateral agreements between developed, developing, and least-developed countries (LDCs).
Stop the genocide in Darfur: Bribe the ChineseBy Lydia LazarDecember 2005You have to give the Bush administration’s deputy secretary of state Robert B. Zoellick credit: he certainly appears to be doing the best he can to stop the genocidal violence in Sudan’s Darfur region.
Summary of commercial agency/distributorship law in PakistanBy Howard L. StovallJanuary 2005The Pakistani Contract Act 1872 (the "Contract Act") contains a special chapter on the relationship between agent and principal, broadly defining the terms as follows:
Unaccompanied immigrant children: The problemBy Alen TakhshNovember 2005Cesare Pavese, the renowned Italian novelist and poet, once exclaimed that, “One stops being a child when one realizes that telling one’s trouble does not make it any better.”
Unaccompanied immigrant children: The solutionBy Alen TakhshDecember 2005This is the second of two articles. The first appeared in the prior issue of The Globe (November 2005, Vol. 43, No. 3) and contained the background factual situation.
USCIS age-out regulations held invalid in the Ninth CircuitBy Pradip K. SahuJanuary 2005The Akhtar v. Burzynski decision may help many of our clients who entered the United States under a "V" visa and may allay some fears for those nearing age 21.