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Conflict of Laws: Introduction to Draft

Kermit Roosevelt III, Laura Elizabeth Little, Christopher A. Whytock and Pauline Toboulidis | April 6, 2021 | Conflict of Laws

The following entry is excerpted from the Reporters’ Memorandum Introduction to Tentative Draft No.2, which comprises a projected Table of Contents and parts of three Chapters (Chapter 1 (Introduction), Chapter 2 (Domicile), and Chapter 5, Topic 2 (Foreign Law)). If...

Conflict of Laws: Domicile of Natural and Juridical Persons

Kermit Roosevelt III, Laura Elizabeth Little, Christopher A. Whytock and Pauline Toboulidis | May 22, 2020 | Conflict of Laws

The following entry contains the Black Letter and Comments a and b to § 2.01 of Tentative Draft No. 1, Chapter 2. Domicile, from Restatement of the Law Third, Conflict of Laws. The full draft contains additional Comments and Reporters’ Notes.This project was on the...

Reporters’ Guide to: Restatement of the Law Third, Conflict of Laws

Kermit Roosevelt III, Laura Elizabeth Little and Christopher A. Whytock | May 15, 2020 | Conflict of Laws

In this summary, Reporters Kermit Roosevelt III, Laura E. Little, and Christopher A. Whytock provide an overview of Tentative Draft No. 1 (2020) of Restatement of the Law Third, Conflict of Laws, which contains parts of Chapter 1, Introduction; Chapter 2, Domicile;...

October Council Meeting Updates

Jennifer Morinigo | October 24, 2017 | American Indian Law, Children and the Law, Conflict of Laws, Data Privacy, Sexual Assault, Student Sexual Misconduct, Torts: Intentional Torts to Persons

At its meeting in New York City on October 19 and 20, The American Law Institute’s Council reviewed drafts for eight projects, with the following outcomes: Law of American Indians: The Council approved Council Draft No. 4, with the exception of § 33 Sovereign Immunity...

Children Crossing Borders: Internationalizing the Restatement of the Conflict of Laws

Louise Ellen Teitz | July 28, 2017 | Children and the Law, Conflict of Laws, U.S. Foreign Relations Law

INTRODUCTION Treating internal U.S. conflicts and international conflicts law the same, without distinguishing between them, has always puzzled non-U.S. lawyers and scholars. Europeans often do not understand how we can treat transnational choice of law decisions as...

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