Symposium: Bankruptcy in the Global Village: The Second Decade
Co-sponsored with the Brooklyn Law School Center for the Study of International Business Law
Introduction
Neil B. Cohen
Michael A. Gerber
Edward J. Janger
Keynote:
Global Insolvency Law and the Role of Multinational Institutions
Christoph G. Paulus
Articles:
Maintaining the Momentum: The Continuing Quest for Global Standards and Principles to Govern Cross-Border Insolvency
Ian F. Fletcher
The Myth (and Realities) of Forum Shopping in Transnational Insolvency
John A. E. Pottow
Universal Proceduralism
Edward J. Janger
Incrementalisms in Global Lawmaking
Susan Block-Lieb
Terence C. Halliday
Choosing the Law Governing Security Interests in International Bankruptcies
Steven L. Harris
The Effect of Reorganization Proceedings on Security Interests: The Position Under English and U.S. Law
Nick Segal
Where are all the Transnational Bankruptcies? The Puzzling Case for Universalism
Robert K. Rasmussen
Group Insolvency—Choice of Forum and Law: The European Experience Under the Influence of English Pragmatism
Gabriel Moss QC
Locating the Eye of the Financial Storm
Jay Lawrence Westbrook
Canada-United States Cross-Border Insolvency Relations andThe UNCITRAL Model Law
Jacob Ziegel
Legitimacy, Technology, and Leverage: The Building Blocks of Insolvency Architecture in the Decade Past and the Decade Ahead
Terence C. Halliday
Notes:
The Hague Convention on Choice-of-Court Agreements: Is the Public Policy Exception Helping Click-Away the Security of Non-Negotiated Agreements?
Keri Bruce
Taking a Gamble on Public Morals: Invoking the Article XIV Exception to GATS
Irem Dogan
A Shot Across the Bow: Changing the Paradigm of Foreign Direct Investment Review in the United States
Shannon M. Haley
Morality v. Reality: The Struggle to Effectively Fight HIV/AIDS and Respect Human Rights
Erica Tracy Kagan
Nonrefoulement Under the Convention Against Torture: How U.S. Allowances for Diplomatic Assurances Contravene Treaty Obligations and Federal Law
Jane C. Kim