| | Global Administrative Law: Bibliographical Resources (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22) |
 | | This article examines how international regulation of the Internet might be structured to satisfy the Constitutional demands – the Article I vesting of legislative power, Article II vesting of appointment power, and Article III vesting of judicial power in the Legislative, Executive, and Judiciary branches respectively – of American administrative law. |
 | | This article analyzes generally the tension between local and international norms as China liberalizes; Section IIIB [135] examines how the APA was used as a model for China’s Administrative Litigation Law, especially in developing procedures for the resolution of administrative disputes, enforcement, and judicial review. |
 | | Reich argues that while the WTO began as a kind of ‘a-legal’ institution, seeking mainly to overcome tariffs and other trade barriers and promising not to meddle in its members’ domestic affairs, it has evolved to become one of the world’s primary law-harmonizing institutions. |
| www.iilj.org /global_adlaw/gal_bibliography.htm (4116 words) |