International institutions Part 4

International institutions Part 4

 

27

Facilitating corruption and human rights violations: the role of international financial institutions
Dawn L. Rothe
Crime, Law and Social Change
Volume 53, Number 5, June 2010 p.457-476

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

28

U.S. REGULATION OF INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS: IT’S TIME FOR AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO COMPLIANCE
Gregory Husisian
Banking Law Journal
Volume 127, Number 3, March 2010 p.195

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

29

Corporate Responsibility before International institutions
Ole Kristian Fauchald Jo Stigen
George Washington International Law Review
Volume 40, Number 4, 2009 p.1025

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30

A Right by Any Other Name: The Evasive Engagement of International Financial Institutions with Human Rights
Adam McBeth
George Washington International Law Review
Volume 40, Number 4, 2009 p.1101

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31

A closer look at ‘too big to fail’: national and international approaches to addressing the risks of large, interconnected financial institutions
Edward F. Greene, Knox L. McIlwain, and Jennifer T. Scott
Capital Markets Law Journal
Volume 5, Number 2, April 2010 p.117-140

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32

Governing the Tributaries of the Mekong-The Contribution of International Law and Institutions to Enhancing Equitable Cooperation Over the Sesan
Alistair Rieu-Clarke and Geoffrey Gooch
Pacific McGeorge Global Business & Development Law Journal
Volume 22, Number 2, 2010 p.193

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33

A New Answer to an Old Question: National Human Rights Institutions and the Domestication of International Law
Richard Carver
Human Rights Law Review
Volume 10, Number 1, March 2010 p.1-32

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34

Why Culture Matters in International Institutions: The Marginality of Human Rights at the World Bank
Galit A. Sarfaty
American Journal of International Law
Volume 103, Number 4, October 2009 p.647

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35

How institutions and regulation shape the influence of bank concentration on economic growth: International evidence
Ana I. Fernández, Francisco González, Nuria Suárez
International Review of Law and Economics
Volume 30, Issue 1, March 2010 p.28-36

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36

National and International Dimensions of Copyright’s Public Domain (An Australian Case Study)
Graham Greenleaf
SCRIPTed: a Journal of Law, Technology & Society
Volume 6, Issue 2, 2009 p.259-340

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

Many examples of innovation in relation to information goods involve works in which various parties have proprietary (copyright) interests, but also involve the public having rights to use those works in ways that involve some of the exclusive rights of the copyright owner. They involve copyright’s “public domain” in the expanded sense of all “public rights: those aspects of copyright law and practice that are important in determining the ability of the public to use works without obtaining a licence on terms set (and changeable) by the copyright owner. The Creative Commons slogan “Some Rights Reserved” sums up rather well the way in which intellectual goods combine proprietary and non-proprietary elements. However, most examples of this broader public domain do not involve the use of Creative Commons licences. The theme of this article is what these examples have in common, how Australia’s copyright law and the institutions that support innovation have paid insufficient attention to what they have in common, and how in Australia at least we need to have a law reform review that will have these common elements (the copyright “public domain” ) as its focus. Eight examples of where Australia’s copyright public domain is in need of reform are considered, as are some of the interconnections between them. Along the way, consideration is given to how the public domain in any particular country comprises both “global” and “national” elements, with examples of what makes Australia’s public domain distinctive.

37

THE INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND AND INTERNATIONAL PRIVATE FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS: A COMPROMISING RELATIONSHIP
COURTNEY STEARNE
Macquarie Journal of Business Law
Volume 6, 2009 p.63

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38

Interplay management: enhancing environmental policy integration among international institutions
Sebastian Oberthür
International Environmental Agreements: Politics, Law and Economics
Volume 9, Number 4, November 2009 p.371-391

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39

ACTIVITIES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW INSTITUTIONS AT THE HAGUE/ACTIVITES DES INSTITUTIONS DE DROIT INTERNATIONAL A LA HAYE
Hague Yearbook of International Law
Volume 21, 2008

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40

Developing Countries Debt Crises, International Financial Institutions, and International Law: Some Preliminary Thoughts
Daniel Bradlow
German Yearbook of International Law
Volume 51, 2008 p.111

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41

Crafting Cooperation: Regional International Institutions in Comparative Perspective
Klabbers, Jan
International Organizations Law Review
Volume 5, Number 2, 2008 p.405-407

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42

Substance, Procedure, and Institutions in the International Harmonization of Competition Policy
Daniel A. Crane
Chicago Journal of International Law
Volume 10, Number 1, Summer 2009 p.143

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Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

International Organizations, International institutions, country.


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