July 2024 International Law Top Blawgs
Coveres actions taken or contemplated to protect the nation interact with the nation’s laws and legal institutions, including cybersecurity, Guantánamo habeas litigation, targeted killing, biosecurity, universal jurisdiction, the Alien Tort Statute, and the state secrets privilege. By Benjamin Wittes, Jack Goldsmith and Robert Chesney.
Covers international judicial assistance.
Summarizes and translates decisions of the US Supreme Court (and occasionally the California Supreme Court) which may be of interest to Swiss legal professionals.
Edited by Martha F. Davis and Margaret Drew.
By University of Miami law professor Michael Froomkin. Covers civil liberties, the Internet, Guantanamo, Iraq attrocities, politics and more.
Discusses key trends in US and international law and policy related to nuclear energy and materials. By Morgan Lewis.
Covers international criminal law. By Alberto Huapaya.
Covers applications, decisions, judgments at the European Court of Human Rights, resolutions by the Committee of Ministers and violations of the European Convention of Human Rights with a focus on French speaking countries in the Council of Europe (Belgium, France, Luxembourg, Monaco and Switzerland).
Covers intellectual property (IP) law topics, including copyright law, trademark law, patent licensing, patent enforcement, and inter party matters. By Volpe Koenig.
Edited by Professor Jacob Katz Cogan.
Edited by Shawn Marie Boyne, Monica Eppinger, Lissa Griffin and Shitong Qiao.
Covers developments in EU case law and legislation. Edited by Laurens Ankersmit, Maria Haag, Jasmin Hiry, Katie Nolan, Marine Corhay and Jonas Bornemann.
Covers the history of both international and domestic wine laws and developing legal issues in the wine industry. By Lindsey A. Zahn.
By Martin Husovec. Comments and reports on important and interesting European developments of technology law (IP & Internet law). The primary aim is to cover and report the case law from the Court of Justice of the European Union and from selected higher Central European courts (German, Slovak, Czech and sometimes Austrian courts).
Looks at financial issues for intellectual property rights: securitisation and collateral, IP valuation for acquisition and balance sheet purposes, tax and R&D breaks, film and product finance, calculating quantum of damages--anything that happens where IP meets money.
Dedicated to the right to self-determination (laid down in the UN Charter), discussing new perspectives, arguments and the potential impacts of these. By Istvan David Toth.
Focuses on China's highest court. By Susan Finder.
Covers intellectual property in China.