The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality

Near the end of the 2009 Term the Supreme Court decided Morrison v. Australia National Bank, Ltd., the strongest anti-extraterritoriality opinion it has produced in modern times. Not only is Congress presumed generally to prefer only territorial regulation, but lower courts that had carved out excep...

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Main Author: Paul B. Stephan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cogitatio 2013-06-01
Series:Politics and Governance
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/89
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spelling doaj-b8d34cfd4be5469d9bf3767fc2cf2bae2020-11-24T23:31:41ZengCogitatioPolitics and Governance2183-24632013-06-01119210110.17645/pag.v1i1.8922The Political Economy of ExtraterritorialityPaul B. Stephan0School of Law, University of Virginia, 580 Massie Road, Charlottesville, VA 22903-1738, USANear the end of the 2009 Term the Supreme Court decided Morrison v. Australia National Bank, Ltd., the strongest anti-extraterritoriality opinion it has produced in modern times. Not only is Congress presumed generally to prefer only territorial regulation, but lower courts that had carved out exceptions from this principle over a long period of time must now revisit their positions. Again this year in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Shell Co. the Court relied on an aggressive use of the presumption against extraterritoriality to cut back on an important field of private litigation. The Court appears to have embraced two related stances: The imposition of barriers to extraterritorial regulation generally advances welfare, and the lower courts cannot be trusted to determine those instances where an exception to this rule might be justified. Implicit in the Court's position are intuitions about the political economy of both legislation and litigation. I want to use the occasion of the Morrison and Kiobel decisions to consider the political economy of extraterritorial regulation by the United States. International lawyers for the most part have analyzed state decisions to exercise prescriptive jurisdiction over extraterritorial transactions in terms of a welfare calculus that determines the likely costs and benefits to the state as a whole. Fewer studies have considered the political economy of the decision whether to regulate foreign transactions. No work of which I am aware has considered the political economy of deciding the extraterritorial question through litigation. This paper seeks to fill these gaps by sketching out what political economy suggests both about extraterritoriality and the role of courts as arbiters of extraterritoriality.https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/89international economic regulationpolitical economy of litigationpolitical economy of regulatory jurisdictionregulatory jurisdiction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paul B. Stephan
spellingShingle Paul B. Stephan
The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality
Politics and Governance
international economic regulation
political economy of litigation
political economy of regulatory jurisdiction
regulatory jurisdiction
author_facet Paul B. Stephan
author_sort Paul B. Stephan
title The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality
title_short The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality
title_full The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality
title_fullStr The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality
title_full_unstemmed The Political Economy of Extraterritoriality
title_sort political economy of extraterritoriality
publisher Cogitatio
series Politics and Governance
issn 2183-2463
publishDate 2013-06-01
description Near the end of the 2009 Term the Supreme Court decided Morrison v. Australia National Bank, Ltd., the strongest anti-extraterritoriality opinion it has produced in modern times. Not only is Congress presumed generally to prefer only territorial regulation, but lower courts that had carved out exceptions from this principle over a long period of time must now revisit their positions. Again this year in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Shell Co. the Court relied on an aggressive use of the presumption against extraterritoriality to cut back on an important field of private litigation. The Court appears to have embraced two related stances: The imposition of barriers to extraterritorial regulation generally advances welfare, and the lower courts cannot be trusted to determine those instances where an exception to this rule might be justified. Implicit in the Court's position are intuitions about the political economy of both legislation and litigation. I want to use the occasion of the Morrison and Kiobel decisions to consider the political economy of extraterritorial regulation by the United States. International lawyers for the most part have analyzed state decisions to exercise prescriptive jurisdiction over extraterritorial transactions in terms of a welfare calculus that determines the likely costs and benefits to the state as a whole. Fewer studies have considered the political economy of the decision whether to regulate foreign transactions. No work of which I am aware has considered the political economy of deciding the extraterritorial question through litigation. This paper seeks to fill these gaps by sketching out what political economy suggests both about extraterritoriality and the role of courts as arbiters of extraterritoriality.
topic international economic regulation
political economy of litigation
political economy of regulatory jurisdiction
regulatory jurisdiction
url https://www.cogitatiopress.com/politicsandgovernance/article/view/89
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