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Browsing Oregon Review of International Law by Title
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Laltaika, Elifuraha
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2014-05-13)
Land is an important natural resource without which other rights including the right to food, the right to housing, and the right to water cannot be realized. This paper reviews selected laws of Tanzania relating to land ...
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Chigara, Benedict Abrahamson
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2023-05-05)
This Article recommends a review of the jurisdictional provision of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) to ensure internal logical coherency of the assumptions that underpin the jurisdictional mandate of the ICJ. The ...
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Zamprogno, Jasmine
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2021-05-14)
In 2018, New Zealand introduced the Child Poverty Reduction Act 2018 (the Act), which was heralded at its inception as a definitive step in the right direction toward easing child poverty. However, the once-praised Act has ...
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Mallinder, Louise
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2013-02-26)
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McMillen, Matthew
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-01)
Plastic pollution is causing irreparable harm to marine wildlife and the environment. The alarming buildup of plastic pollution is also continuing to negatively affect humankind, and current international law is insufficient ...
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Dillon, Sara
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2022-05-04)
Propaganda is playing an unprecedented role in global political life. With frightening reach and ambition, political and corporate actors are using propaganda to undermine the democratic ideals of truth and transparency. ...
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Zaidi, Kamaal
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2018-05-25)
The prospect of High-Speed Rail (HSR) in Canada is gaining popularity in the wake of transportation sustainability. HSR is defined as public infrastructure for rail transit systems capable of traveling 200 km/h (125 mph) ...
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DeLuca, Angela
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2018-05-25)
This paper will analyze the German and the U.S. energy markets in an effort to understand the discrepancy in renewable energy development and the efficacy of each country’s chosen path.
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Arias, Arturo
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2014-05-13)
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Reddy, Sahana; Ramaprasad, Arkalgud
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
Any democratic state must internalize and be sensitive to the human rights of susceptible groups. Most successful democracies seem to have realized this paramount goal, though reality presents a contradictory proposition ...
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Bloch, Kate E.
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2013-02-26)
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Smith, George P., II
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2023-05-05)
This Article investigates the steps which need to be undertaken in order to ensure that scientific conduct is legitimized—and thereby recognized—as indispensable for global peace and progress. Contemporary philosophy of ...
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Chidede, Talkmore
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2019-06-19)
This article seeks to examine the contemporary international investment law framework of Africa to determine whether such framework preserves host states’ right to regulate investment in public interest.
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Abdelkader, Engy
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2014-07-07)
More than seventy five percent of the world’s population dwells in countries where state restrictions on religious freedom prevail. Despite laudable strides towards democratic reform, Myanmar is among those nations. In ...
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Vial, Gonzalo; Blavi, Francisco
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2017-07-27)
The seat of an arbitration is the jurisdiction in which the arbitration procedure takes place. The seat not only influences the law applicable to the arbitration, but its courts also exercise supervisory powers over the ...
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Blaskowsky, Alexa
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-01)
This Comment will examine how the Maritime Labor Convention (MLC) has failed to fully address seafarer abandonment. Part I discusses how the International Labor Organization (ILO) and the International Maritime Organization ...
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Bagaric, Mirko; Hepburn, Samantha; Xynas, Lidia
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2015-09-10)
There has been a considerable increase in the penalties for drug trafficking following the United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs 1961, over fifty years ago. In many parts of the world, the sanctions are as ...
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Vida, Emily
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2022-05-04)
Readers hardly need to be reminded of how the sudden onset of COVID-19 in early 2020 turned the world upside down. Countries closed their borders. Toilet paper became scarce. And hospitals in population-dense areas operated ...
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Hebert, Je’an-Luc
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2018-05-25)
This summary begins by discussing how, under UNCLOS, territorial sovereignty is established and what water rights attach to islands and coastal states in order to provide the reader with the background necessary to understand ...
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Jimoh, Mujib
(University of Oregon School of Law, 2024-05-01)
In 1986, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) adopted Resolution 41/120, which provides quality control for introducing new rights under international law. Under the Resolution, five criteria must be fulfilled: the ...
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