The Global Business Law Review

<strong><em>The Global Business Law Review</em></strong> is committed to creating a truly transnational dialogue for those interested in the pressing issues in international and business law. If you wish to join the global forum by contributing a commentary or article, The Global Business Law Review is always accepting full-length scholarly works for publication. Please email the editorial team at <b>[email protected]</b> with any questions or comments.

List of Papers (Total 95)

Medical Aid in Dying (MAID): A Comparative Analysis of Domestic and International Approaches to This Controversial Subject

This Note analyzes the Medical Aid in Dying (MAID) structures in various countries involving their eligibility criteria, application, and potential consequences. Section II analyzes MAID in the United States. Part A discusses the background and evolution of MAID laws in the United States on both a federal and state level. Part B is a multi-part analysis of the suggested expanded...

Catch Me If You Can Claim Copyright Infringement: How Copyright Law Unevenly Protects Novice Scriptwriters

In the realm of creative endeavors, novice scriptwriters often find themselves in a precarious position, highly susceptible to having their original work exploited for profit by formidable players in the industry, drawing a parallel to the timeless tale of David versus Goliath. In these all-too common scenarios, the multi-million-dollar film agencies that, reminiscent of Goliath...

Enforcing Intentional Motherhood: The Harrowing Consequences Arising from the Inconsistency of Statutes Regarding Surrogacy, and How the Enforcement of Surrogacy Contracts is the Answer

This Note discusses how the practice of commercial surrogacy is treated across the United States. Most notably, how the courts treat surrogacy contracts from state to state. A summary of how Canada views the practice of surrogacy will provide a general view into how the view of the practice is different across borders. It will be discovered that, while there is a federal law...

Our Changing Reality: The Metaverse and the Importance of Privacy Regulations in the United States

This Note discusses the legal and pressing digital challenges that arise in connection with the growing use of virtual reality, and more specifically, the metaverse. As this digital realm becomes more integrated into our daily lives, the United States should look towards creating a federal privacy law that protects fundamental individual privacy rights. This Note argues that...

Supreme Court Overreach Through Broad Discretionary Consideration of Ameliorative Measures in International Child Abduction

This Note provides a critical analysis of the United States Supreme Court's recent decision in Golan v. Saada--a case setting precedent in the area of international child abduction by biological parents. It argues that the Supreme Court oversteps the presiding law in the field through the use of discretionary ameliorative measures. These ameliorative measures do not show evidence...

#NoFilter: How Discovery Filter Teams Breach Privilege Rights and Why They Require Stricter Regulation

This note examines the Supreme Court’s substantial need to weigh in on how filter teams should be used given current circuit splits and identifies several best practices to remedy the issues they currently present. Part I discusses the principal issues for which filter teams are scrutinized. Namely, numerous district courts hold that filter teams provide the government with the...

Corporate Governance and the Audit Function in Jordan and the UK: A Comparative Perspective

Superior corporate governance forms the bedrock of a prosperous economy. An integral component of outstanding corporate governance is the role of transparent, accurate and freely available information with respect to a company’s books and records. Numerous stakeholders including current and potential investors, business partners, employees, regulators and the public, rely on the...

Comparative Intellectual Property Protection for Marijuana: United States vs. The European Union

Protecting intellectual property relating to marijuana is a complicated endeavor. The federal ban on marijuana renders trademark protection difficult at best, and patent protection, while available, still rife with complications. In Europe, the laws pose similar challenges in the protection and enforcement of marijuana related intellectual property. This Note presents a...

Force Majeure Clauses at the Age of COVID-19: How Should Courts Interpret Them and Why a Conservative Application is Necessary

A force majeure clause aims to define the scope of unforeseeable events that may excuse or delay a party’s performance. In the wake of the Coronavirus (COVID) pandemic, many parties to disputes attempted to turn to force majeure clauses written in boilerplate language. COVID is distinguishable, however, from other historical force majeure events because of its rapid global...

Keep Your Hands to Yourself! How Law Enforcement Intrusion into Education Records Makes Campus Title IX Courts Necessary: Why Our System Might Be Better Than Most

Sexual harassment deprives students of equal educational opportunities, and sexual crimes on campus have been and continue to be a serious threat to student safety. Congress established Title IX and the Family Education Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), in part, to guarantee and safeguard both student records and student safety. However, Title IX and FERPA are difficult doctrines...

Flattening the Curve While Protecting Our Right to Privacy: How the United States Can Implement the Digital Contract Tracing Efforts Used in East Asia

This paper looks at the digital contact tracing efforts implemented by other nations and assesses how similar measures could operate under enacted and proposed United States laws. Part I overviews the history of contact tracing and its effectiveness in prior disease outbreaks. Part II delves into the digital contact tracing efforts implemented by South Korea and Singapore. These...

Veterinary Reporting and Immunity Laws in the United States: How this Model Law Could Positively Impact National Veterinary Practices and International Animal Law

This Note highlights the importance of animal law, including its impact on human violence and international businesses involving animals. The issues in veterinary reporting of suspected animal abuse must be addressed, as it has a direct effect on exposing the link between animal violence and human violence. Each state is encouraged to adopt the legislation proposed by this Note...

The Rise of Environmental, Social and Corporate Governance Disclosures in the United States and Mandatory Human Rights Due Diligence in Europe: Implications for U.S. Lawyers

Over the past decade, due in part to the devastating impact of the global financial crisis of 2008 and growing awareness of climate change, the world witnessed increasing interest on the part of society in general, and investors in particular, for responsible business. “Responsible business” is the concept that business should be conducted in a way that 1) does not violate...

Canadian Corporations Bound by the Phoenix: Setting the Path for the United States

This Note argues that the United States courts have jurisdiction to consider corporate liability for international law violations of human rights under the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Canada, in Nevsun Resources Ltd. v. Araya. The United States Supreme Court has escaped holding such liability exists, but Canada has outlined how countries, such as the United States, no...

Business, Human Rights, and Transitional Justice: Overcoming the Regulatory Dysfunction of International Law

It is said that traditional international public law is state-centric and concerns mostly State obligations and responsibility. For this, it excluded corporate actors from any accountability mechanism, even when the corporations contribute to armed conflicts and international crimes. International law does not provide a clear definition of what amounts to “subjects” under this...

The Human Rights Due Diligence Standard-Setting in the European Union: Bridging the Gap Between Ambition and Reality

Globalization has, over the past decades, erased borders between continents and countries. It has propelled international trade to previously unforeseen heights. Nonetheless, it has brought about not only positive impact, but also negative consequences for individuals and communities worldwide. Businesses have often been alleged to have been directly or indirectly involved in...

Is This the End of FTC Restitution and Disgorgement Under Section 13(b)?

This note argues that the Seventh Circuit’s deviation from years of precedent in FTC v. Credit Bureau is an improper interpretation of Supreme Court precedent. For decades, Section 13(b) has allowed the Federal Trade Commission to be able to pursue equitable monetary orders in the form of restitution and disgorgement as ancillary relief to permanent injunctions. The Seventh...

Regulatory Responses to Data Privacy Crises and Their Ongoing Impact on E-Discovery

This note argues that advancements in technology and data analysis have reduced the efficacy of the legal data privacy framework in the United States. Furthermore, foreign law blocking statutes expose litigants and corporations to increased data liability. Indeed, not only do consumers lack adequate legal remedies, but litigants face uncertain legal liability and increased costs...

Returning to the Moon: Legal Challenges as Humanity Begins to Settle the Solar System – Full Transcript

On March 6, 2020, leading space lawyers gathered in the Moot Court Room of Cleveland-Marshall College of Law at Cleveland State University to discuss and debate the legal challenges and opportunities arising from the growing number of lunar missions in the planning stages in early 2020, in particular NASA’s Artemis Program which will for the first time establish a permanent human...

Ohio's Avoidance of Total Maximum Daily Load and the Continued Relevance of the Constructive Submission Doctrine

This Note examines several provisions of the Clean Water Act (CWA)—in particular, Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs)—in the context of recent litigation over the State of Ohio’s plan to address Lake Erie water quality. It looks at the role of TMDLs in CWA implementation and explains Ohio’s response to Lake Erie water quality, asserting that Ohio’s ranking of Lake Erie as a "low...