21.1
Summer
2020

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Article
21.1
The Impact of Trade and Investment Treaties on Fiscal Resources and Taxation in Developing Countries
Sonia E. Rolland
Professor of Law, Northeastern University School of Law.

The author is grateful for the resources provided by the GDP Center in support of this research. The author also wishes to thank Kevin Gallagher, Rachel Thrasher, Devika Dutt and all the participants of the Workshop on Trade and Investment Treaties & Fiscal Stability: Toward Sustainable Revenue Mobilization for Development held on November 15, 2019 at the GDP Center (Boston University).

 

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Comment
21.1
Treaty Interpretation Under a Covenant Paradigm
Jared I. Mayer
J.D. Candidate, 2021, The University of Chicago Law School.

I would like to thank Professor Douglas Baird for his insightful comments and strong support for this project. I would also like to thank Beth Macnab, Nyle Hussain, Bonnie St. Charles, Julian Zhu, Sarah Gaskell, and the rest of the CJIL team for their helpful comments and criticisms, and for their guidance along the way. Lastly, I would like to thank the friends with whom I have discussed this topic in conversation many times and to whose encouragement and support this Comment is largely owed.

 

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Comment
21.1
Domestic Restrictions on Non-Governmental Organizations and Potential Protections through Legal Personality: Time for a Change?
Casey Jedele

The author would like to thank all those involved in creating this Comment, especially her faculty advisor, Professor Tom Ginsburg, her editors (Rebecca Ritchie, Trevor Kehrer, and Silver Lin) and the entire CJIL Board. Finally, special thanks to Bradley, Jeanette, Mark, Chelsea, and Kayla for their consistent and uplifting encouragement.

I. Introduction

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Comment
21.1
How Social Media Companies Could Be Complicit in Incitement to Genocide
Neema Hakim
J.D. Candidate, 2021, The University of Chicago Law School.

The author wishes to thank his partner Barbara Silva for her endless love, faith, and support. The author also wishes to thank the entire Chicago Journal of International Law editorial staff for their extensive review, his editor Christine Liu for her guidance, and Professor Adam Chilton for his advisement.

I. Introduction

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Article
21.1
The Identification of Customary International Law: Institutional and Methodological Pluralism in U.S. Courts
Noah A. Bialos

The author would like to thank John Meyer, Woody Powell, Nick Sherefkin, Audrey Tempelsman, and participants in the 2018 American Society of International Law Research Forum for comments on earlier drafts. The author would also like to thank Julian Nyarko for the data on treaties and executive agreements in force, as well as the staff of the Chicago Journal of International Law for their excellent editorial assistance. All views and errors are attributable to the author alone.

I. Introduction