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Philippe Sands is at it again. In an article in the San Francisco Chronicle last week, available here, Sands appears to be publicly pushing his idea that David Addington, John Yoo, and others he describes as "higher in the administration's hierarchy" (read: someone higher than the V.P.'s chief of staff!) should think twice about travelling abroad or they might...

Last month the WTO issued a decision (available here) in favor of the United States regarding the illegality of Mexico's beverage tax. According to the USTR press release, under the Mexican tax, "soft drinks made with imported sweeteners, such as high-fructose corn syrup (HFCS) and beet sugar, are subject to a 20 percent tax on their sale and distribution. Beverages...

I would be curious what our readers' opinions are of this compromise. Scroll down and vote. Do you approve or disapprove of the Graham/Levin Amendment?ApproveDisapproveDon't Know/No Opinion  Free polls from Pollhost.com...

The Harvard Law Review has just issued its Supreme Court Review and it includes four wonderful articles by Richard Posner, Vicki Jackson, Jeremy Waldron and Ernest Young debating Roper and the citation to foreign authority. Jackson and Waldron favor comparativism, while Young and Posner express strong skepticism. Abstracts and full texts of the articles are available on the Harvard Law...

As Bobby helpfully notes in a comment to my last post, the revised Graham Amendment has made it through the full Senate and will be presented to the House negotiators soon for approval on that side (see the Washington Post's report here). It is a bit early, but it is worth thinking about the legal effect of the amendment, if...

Here is the full text of the proposed Senate compromise bill on detainee rights to challenge their confinement in federal courts, which I discussed below (thanks to Greg Fox for the link). I may have slightly different comments after reviewing the bill directly, but I must run to class...

According to this Washington Post report, the Senate may have reached a deal on the controversial "Graham Amendment" stripping federal courts of habeas jurisdiction over appeals by Guantanamo detainees (which Bobby and I have blogged about here and here and which SCOTUSBlog discusses here). (The full text is posted above). The bill on first glance seems pretty reasonable, especially since...

Last week the D.C. federal district court dismissed a class action lawsuit against Ethiopia. In the case of Nemariam v. Ethiopia, __ F.Supp.2d __ (D.D.C. Nov. 8, 2005), available here, Ethiopia allegedly expropriated bank accounts of Eritreans living in Ethiopia. Specifically, the allegation is that Ethiopia and its agents engaged in a systematic effort to seize the property of the...

Ken Anderson is the first member of the blogosphere to read every page of the 5,000 page ICRC study on Customary International Humanitarian Law (which we discussed here when it was published last spring). His thoughtful analysis is here. So why pay attention to the study?What does the Study mean in practical terms for matters of international humanitarian law?...

A parody of the recent New York Times article, “Yale Law Frets Over Court Choices It Knows Best”: NEW HAVEN, Nov. 8 - The morning after Judge Samuel A. Alito Jr. was announced as the president’s choice for the Supreme Court, some students and professors at his alma mater, the Yale Law School, were...

Although little noticed in the mainstream media, pirates are on the prowl along the Horn of Africa. In a short squib in the New York Times this weekend it was reported that “Somali pirates chased and attacked five ships in the last week in a sharp rise of banditry apparently directed form a “mother ship” prowling the busy Indian Ocean...