On Loewen

Maybe its just me; but the result in Loewen, a major decision by a distinguished NAFTA Tribunal, is not so remarkable, other than its length. Indeed the facts of the Mississippi trial are scary and outrageous. But as long as a State provides due process which including a meaningful internal system of [...]

2020-07-22T12:38:08-05:00February 15, 2018|

Texas has Failing Grades in Obligations of Child Find

Texas, I am sad to say, has low grades in its obligations of Child Find. Child Find is a legal requirement that schools find all children who have disabilities and who may be entitled to special education services. Child Find covers every child from birth through age 21. The school must [...]

2018-01-13T13:16:07-06:00January 13, 2018|

Significant Case from the Seventh Circuit

A recent arbitration case decided by the Seventh Circuit: Hyatt Franchising v Shen Zhen seems remarkable in two respects. One the author is Frank Easterbrook, one of the best in our judiciary so any opinion of his deserves close attention. Second is the court's construction of the FAA and the standards [...]

2017-12-17T09:19:50-06:00December 17, 2017|

Thoughts on Making Arbitration Great Again

After the US election, it was a certainty that in my inbox every morning there was at least one, if not more, email with a discussion on the future of arbitration in our changing society today. And this debate has continued in halls of university law schools to GAR events [...]

2017-11-08T10:23:00-06:00November 8, 2017|

Children’s Disabilities: The Endrew Case and Education of Inclusion

This last Term, the US Supreme Court spoke unanimously through Chief Justice Roberts of the necessity for a disabled child’s individualized education program (IEP) to set forth a robust and challenging endeavor and objective for the child. The IEP is the education “delivery system” for the Individuals with Disabilities Education [...]

2017-08-23T15:17:19-05:00August 23, 2017|

Privilege and International Arbitration (3)

The law of privilege as relating to in-house counsel (especially in civil law jurisdictions) is indeed a controversial and much debated issue. Well-spoken advocates from the “internal” as well as “external” bar have written and spoken on this this issue forcefully. In reading DLA Piper’s Legal Professional Privilege Global Guide [...]

2017-08-23T13:25:47-05:00August 14, 2017|

On Arbitration and Tyranny

It is a certainty that in my inbox every morning there is at least one, if not more, email with a discussion on the future of arbitration in our changing society today. Further, the debate continues in halls of university law schools to GAR events to law firm seminars. I [...]

2017-08-23T13:25:18-05:00July 24, 2017|

Legal Privilege and International Arbitration Issue (2)

In reading DLA Piper’s Legal Professional Privilege Global Guide (2017), http://www.dlapiperlegalprivilege.com/system/modules/za.co.heliosdesign.dla.lotw/functions/export.pdf?country=all, it is absolutely mind boggling how the world’s attorney/client privilege rules are so different, with many nuances that attach to each country, such as competition investigations and dawn raids in the EU (Akzo Nobel), in-house counsel rules, professional secrecy, [...]

2017-08-23T13:24:40-05:00July 13, 2017|

Visual Artists Royalty Rights

A visual artist's royalty rights on resale (or droit de suite) is only recognized in some countries, but momentum is building to make this right a universal one and it is about time. Artists' heirs and families many times are very engaged in the artist' work long after the artist [...]

2017-07-05T04:54:01-05:00July 4, 2017|
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