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Oona A. Hathaway, Presidential Power over International Law: Restoring the Balance. (Article)

Adam B. Cox & Cristina M. Rodríguez,
The President and Immigration Law
. (Article)

J. Harvie Wilkinson III, If It Ain’t Broke... (YLJ Online)

Marriage, Property and [In]Equality: Remedying ERISA’s Disparate Impact on Spousal Wealth
ImageCongress is considering pension reform in the wake of the tremendous loss in market value of retirement plans during the current recession. This offers a historic moment to remedy an unintended but profound gender disparity embedded in the federal law governing retirement plans in this country.

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The Mess of Manifest Disregard

ImageA circuit split is in the making, and it could signal a shift with significant implications for federal arbitration law. Just eighteen months after the U.S. Supreme Court’s March 25, 2008 decision in the controversial case of Hall Street Associates v. Mattel, Inc., three circuits are already in ripe disagreement as to whether Hall Street abrogates the half-century old, judicially-created doctrine of “manifest disregard.”

Manifest disregard is a common-law exception to the limited grounds for vacatur of arbitral awards enumerated in the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA). This doctrine empowers courts to refuse to enforce awards that evince a “manifest disregard of the law,” understood to mean a willful defiance of clearly applicable law, not just garden-variety legal error. It has always been controversial for at least two reasons.

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