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The quasi war cases - and their relevance to whether "letters of marque and reprisal" constrain presidential war powers
I. INTRODUCTION I. INTRODUCTION Constitutional scholars cite three Supreme Court decisions arising from the undeclared Quasi War with France in...
Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, 03/22/05 by J. Gregory Sidak · More from publication -
Uberregulation without economics: the World Trade Organization's decision in the U.S.-Mexico arbitration on telecommunications services
In April 2004, a World Trade Organization ("WTO") arbitration panel found that Mexico had violated its commitments under the Annex on...
Federal Communications Law Journal, 12/01/04 by J. Gregory Sidak · More from publication -
The price of experience: the Constitution after September 11, 2001
What is the price of experience? Do men buy it for a song? What is the price of experience? Do men buy it for a song? Or wisdom for a dance...
Constitutional Commentary, 03/22/02 by J. Gregory Sidak · More from publication -
Acquisitions by partially privatized firms: the case of Deutsche Telekom and VoiceStream
A recent phenomenon in competition policy is the acquisition of a private firm by an enterprise that is either wholly owned by government or in the...
Federal Communications Law Journal, 12/01/01 by J. Gregory Sidak · More from publication -
True God of the next justice
I. INTRODUCTION I. INTRODUCTION For a decade or more, American constitutional discourse has emitted a detectable odor of bigotry toward Roman...
Constitutional Commentary, 03/22/01 by J. Gregory Sidak · More from publication -
A consumer-welfare approach to the mandatory unbundling of telecommunications networks.

The authors evaluate antitrust jurisprudence as an approach in determining when an element of the local telecommunications network meets the rules...
Yale Law Journal, 12/01/99 by Hausman, Jerry A.; Sidak, J. Gregory · More from publication -
Q: Should consumers pay the `stranded costs' of utility companies?
Yes: The government can't change the rules and force utility shareholders to pay the cost. Yes: The government can't change the rules and force...
Insight on the News, 11/09/98 by J. Gregory Sidak · More from publication




