17.2

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17.2
In the Child’s Best Interests: Examining International Child Abduction, Adoption, and Asylum
Hannah Loo
J.D. Candidate, Class of 2017, The University of Chicago Law School.

Special thanks to the CJIL staff and Professor Emily Buss for their guidance, feedback, and support throughout the development of this topic. Additional thanks to the attorneys of Allen & Gledhill LLP, Harry Elias Partnership LLP, and Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP who helped inspire this paper, though these views are my own.

 

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17.2
Grasping at Origins: Shifting the Conversation in the Historical Study of Human Rights
Christopher N.J. Roberts
Associate Professor, University of Minnesota Law School; Affiliated Faculty, Department of Sociology. cnr@umn.edu.

For comments and suggestions, the author thanks June Carbone, Jessica Clarke, Tom Ginsburg, Mark Goodale, Oren Gross, Fred Morrison, Fionnuala Ní Aoláin, Robin Phinney, Dan Schwarcz, Kathryn Sikkink, Jonathan Simon, Margaret R. Somers, Kiyo Tsutsui, Susan Waltz, Laura Weinrib, Barbara Welke, and Richard Wilson. For valuable research assistance, the author thanks Ashlyn Clark, Ceena Idicula, Spencer Ptacek, and Eric Ryu. The author is also grateful for comments received at the Fritz Thyssen Institute, Cologne, Germany, the Max Planck Institute, Göttingen, Germany, the University of Minnesota Law School Squaretable Workshop, the University of Michigan Law School Human Rights Workshop, and panel sessions at the annual meetings of the Law & Society Association and the American Sociological Association.

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17.2
Unilateral Corporate Regulation
William Magnuson
Associate Professor, Texas A&M University School of Law; J.D., Harvard Law School; M.A., Università di Padova; A.B., Princeton University.

The author wishes to thank Jack Goldsmith, William Alford, Matthew Stephenson, Jacob Gersen, Elisabeth de Fontenay, James Coleman, Jacob Eisler, and William Dodge for helpful comments and conversations.

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17.2
Corporate Torts: International Human Rights and Superior Officers
Jennifer M. Green
Associate Professor, University of Minnesota Law School.

I am grateful for the important feedback and comments of Doug Cassel, Jessica Clarke, Prentiss Cox, Fionnuala Ni Aolain, Hari Osofsky, Richard Painter, Beth Stephens, James Stewart, and David Weissbrodt. I also appreciate the insights of my colleagues at the University of Minnesota Law School faculty workshop and those at the Business and Human Rights Scholars Conference sponsored by the University of Washington School of Law, the New York University Stern Center for Business and Human Rights, and the Rutgers Business School, the Rutgers Center for Corporate Law and Governance, and the Business and Human Rights Journal. I have been counsel for parties or amicus curiae in a number of cases mentioned in this article, including on an amicus curiae brief on superior responsibility in Doe v. Drummond. I thank the scholars I had the privilege to work with on the amicus curiae brief as well as my co-counsel, Judith Chomsky. Thanks to the wonderful research librarians at the University of Minnesota Library—in particular Connie Lenz and Loren Turner, and former UMN international law librarians Mary Rumsey and Suzanne Thorpe. Excellent research assistance was provided by Griffin Ferry, Anne Dutton, Soren Lagaard, Conor Smith, and Ceena Idincula Johnson. Special thanks to the editors at the Chicago Journal of International Law for their thoughtful, careful, and professional work.

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17.2
Harmonizing Multinational Parent Company Liability for Foreign Subsidiary Human Rights Violations
Vivian Grosswald Curran
Distinguished Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh.

Unless otherwise noted, translations are mine. I thank Professor Mireille Delmas-Marty for her helpful comments on a draft of this article and for the opportunity to present it in an earlier form at the Collège de France. I also thank Professor Olivier Moréteau for inviting me to present some of the ideas expressed here at the 2016 annual meeting of Juris Diversitas.