By Alan Raul, Joan Loughnane, Stephen McInerney and Laura Sorice | May 6, 2022
State-sponsored attacks threaten to wreak havoc on companies' essential IT systems, Internet devices, software, and all manner of critical infrastructure in private sector hands.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Nicholas Rostow | April 22, 2022
Russia has not just violated the UN Charter; it has violated a solemn undertaking by Putin's predecessor as Russia's President.
By Zack Needles | Alaina Lancaster | April 19, 2022
In this episode, Law.com's Bruce Love speaks with Andrii Humenchuk, GC at Evo, the largest ecommerce company in Ukraine, and Tai-Heng Cheng, co-head of Sidley's international arbitration and trade practice.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Eric B. Stern | April 19, 2022
As the risk of cyber-attacks grow, and procuring cyber-insurance has become more difficult, policyholders have tried to rely on non-cyber policies to cover their cyber-related losses.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By David Lenefsky | April 6, 2022
Putin's threat on February 25 of a nuclear response if the United States or NATO "interferes with us" represents a major change in the concept of "no first use," a pledge or a policy by a nuclear weapons power not to be the first to use nuclear weapons.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Myrna Barakat | April 1, 2022
In two recent cases arising from a single arbitration, the courts of England and France reached opposite results on what law governs the parties' agreement to arbitrate. These two divergent views led to two significantly different outcomes highlighting the pitfalls of international arbitration: The UK Supreme Court denied enforcement of the arbitration award while the French court upheld it. This article explores the circumstances that led to this awkward outcome and the key takeaways.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By John Q. Barrett | March 29, 2022
After World War II, Russia prosecuted Nazis for committing in Ukraine the same international crimes that Russia is committing there today.
By Jeffrey M. Winn | March 29, 2022
Constance Baker Motley has been historically under-appreciated. This historical slight should forever cease, however, with Tomiko Brown-Nagin's superb new biography of Motley, which spotlights the great woman's origin story and significance as a pathfinder in the law.
New York Law Journal | Commentary
By Richard E. Finneran and Andrey Spektor | March 18, 2022
Cases arising from the last klepto initiative and the hundreds of forfeiture cases around the country have contributed to settled precedent that will be front and center when targets of the new KleptoCapture Task Force will inevitably start challenging its seizures in court. This article discusses the potential legal hurdles that lie ahead for the DOJ.
By Elliott B. Jacobson | March 4, 2022
As the mounting evidence makes clear, Putin is—and for a long time now has been—a war criminal.
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