INTRODUCTION
David J. Bederman, 25 Years of Student Scholarship and Editorship for the Emory International Law Review
SYMPOSIUM IN MINIATURE: RELIGIOUS SYMBOLS ON GOVERNMENT PROPERTY
John Witte, Jr. & Nina-Louisa Arold, Lift High the Cross?: Contrasting the New European and American Cases on Religious Symbols on Government Property
Adam Linkner, How Salazar v. Buono Synthesizes the Supreme Court’s Establishment Clause Precedent into a Single Test
Andrea Pin, Public Schools, the Italian Crucifix, and the European Court of Human Rights: The Italian Separation of Church and State
ARTICLES
Phoenix X.F. Cai, Making WTO Remedies Work for Developing Nations: The Need for Class Actions
Rex D. Glensy, The Use of International Law in U.S. Constitutional Adjudication
John D. Haskell, Hugo Grotius in the Contemporary Memory of International Law: Secularism, Liberalism, and the Politics of Restatement and Denial
Ilan Saban, Theorizing and Tracing the Legal Dimensions of a Control Framework: Law and the Arab-Palestinian Minority in Israel’s First Three Decades (1948–1978)
Dustin N. Sharp, Requiem for a Pipedream: Oil, The World Bank, and the Need for Human Rights Assessments
Huma T. Yasin, Playing Catch-up: Proposing the Creation of Status-Based Regulations to Bring Private Military Contractor Firms Within the Purview of International and Domestic Law
COMMENTS
Janelle L. Cornwall, It Was the First Strike of Bloggers Ever: An Examination of Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights as Italian Bloggers Take a Stand Against the Alfano Decree
Christina Lembo, FIFA Transfer Regulations and UEFA Player Eligibility Rules: Major Changes in European Football and the Negative Effect on Minors
Joanna MacMillan, Reformasi and Public Corruption: Why Indonesia’s Anti-corruption Agency Strategy Should Be Reformed to Effectively Combat Public Corruption
Mindy Pava, The Cuban Conundrum: Proposing an International Trademark Registry for Well-Known Foreign Marks
Anand Sithian, “But the Americans Made Me Do It!”: How United States v. UBS Makes the Case for Executive Exhaustion
Christina Weston, The Enforcement Loophole: Judgment-Recognition Defenses as a Loophole to Corporate Accountability for Conduct Abroad
BOOK REVIEW
Laurie R. Blank, Principles of Counter-Terrorism Law
SHARIA, FAMILY, AND DEMOCRACY: RELIGIOUS NORMS AND FAMILY LAW IN PLURALISTIC DEMOCRATIC STATES
John Witte, Jr., Foreword—Frontiers of Juridical Pluralism: Law, Religion, and the Family
RELIGIOUS AND LEGAL PLURALISM IN COMPARATIVE THEORETICAL PERSPECTIVE
Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im, Religious Norms and Family Law: Is It Legal or Normative Pluralism?
Ann Laquer Estin, Family Law, Pluralism, and Human Rights
Natan Lerner, Group Rights and Legal Pluralism
Rosalind I.J. Hackett, Regulating Religious Freedom in Africa
RELIGIOUS AND LEGAL PLURALISM IN NIGERIA
Abdulmumini A. Oba, Religious and Customary Laws in Nigeria
Eyene Okpanachi, Between Conflict and Compromise: Lessons on Sharia and Pluralism from Nigeria’s Kaduna and Kebbi States
Abdul-Fatah Kola Makinde & Philip Ostien, The Independent Sharia Panel of Lagos State
M. Christian Green, Religion, Family Law, and Recognition of Identity in Nigeria
RELIGIOUS AND LEGAL PLURALISM IN GLOBAL COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE
Joel A. Nichols, Religion, Marriage, and Pluralism
Pascale Fournier, Borders and Crossroads: Comparative Perspectives on Minorities and Conflict of Laws
Yüksel Sezgin, Women’s Rights in the Triangle of State, Law, and Religion: A Comparison of Egypt and India
T W Bennett, Legal Pluralism and the Family in South Africa: Lessons from Customary Law Reform
RECENT DEVELOPMENT
Lara M. Pair & Paul Frankenstein, The New ICC Rule on Consolidation: Progress or Change?
SYMPOSIUM: AWORLDWIDE RESPONSE: AN EXAMINATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW FRAMEWORKS IN THE AFTERMATH OF NATURAL DISASTERS
Jenny R. Hernandez & Anne D. Johnson, A Call To Respond: The International Community’s Obligation To Mitigate the Impact of Natural Disasters
Paul E. Weisenfeld, Successes and Challenges of the Haiti Earthquake Response: The Experience of USAID
Jim Chen, Modern Disaster Theory: Evaluating Disaster Law as a Portfolio of Legal Rules
Brian Concannon, Jr. & Beatrice Lindstrom, Cheaper, Better, Longer-Lasting: A Rights-Based Approach to Disaster Response in Haiti
Benedetta Faedi Duramy, Women in the Aftermath of the 2010 Haitian Earthquake
Elyse Mosquini, Are Lawyers Unsung Disaster Heroes?: The Importance of Well-Prepared Domestic Legal and Regulatory Frameworks for Effective Disaster Response
Jonathan Todres, Mainstreaming Children’s Rights in Post-disaster Settings
COMMENTS
Daniel Englander, Protecting the Human Rights of LGBT People in Uganda in the Wake of Uganda’s “Anti Homosexuality Bill, 2009”
Heather Greenfield, International Law, Religious Limitations, and Cultural Sensitivity: The Park51 Mosque at Ground Zero
Abraham U. Kannof, Dueling Nationalities: Dual Citizenship, Dominant and Effective Nationality, and the Case of Anwar al-Aulaqi
Shaira Nanwani, The Burqa Ban: An Unreasonable Limitation on Religious Freedom or a Justifiable Restriction?
Danielle Viera, Try as They Might, Just Can’t Get It Right: Shortcomings of the International Megan’s Law of 2010
BOOK REVIEW
Jim Chen, Soft Law and the Global Financial System../fileadmin/journals/eilr/25/25.3/Chen_BR.pdf