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Conflict of Laws, Cases, Comments, and Questions (American Casebook Series) (Instant Digital Access Code Only)

  • Edition : 11th ed., 2022
  • Author(s) : Kay, Kramer, Roosevelt et al
    • ISBN: 9781636594699
    • SKU: 93044
    • Condition: New
    • Format: Hardcover

    $280.32

    List Price: $292.00

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    • ISBN: 9781636594699
    • SKU: 93044U
    • Condition: Used
    • Format: Hardcover

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    • SKU: 93044E
    • Format: Digital Access Code Only

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    • ISBN: 9781636594699
    • SKU: 93044R
    • Condition: New
    • Format: Hardcover

    $204.40

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    Rental Due: 06/7/2025
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  • What is a Connected Casebook?

    In an effort to offer more affordable, and powerful, law school textbook options to law students, Aspen Publishers/Wolters Kluwer Legal Education is now offering Connected Casebook versions of some of their textbook titles. With Connected Casebook versions, you get all of this:

    • A pristine, unused rental copy of the textbook (which must be returned by the end of your course semester), with no highlighting or writing restrictions,
    • Immediate, lifetime access to the digital copy of that edition of the textbook, and
    • Access to the Interactive Study Center where you can utilize outlining tools, self-assessment tools that will show you your strengths and weaknesses, and online study aids including curated excerpts and practice questions from leading study aids such as Examples & Explanations and Glannon Guides.

    What is the benefit of a Connected Casebook?

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The 11th edition of the popular Conflicts casebook continues to deepen and explore contemporary approaches to choice of law and jurisdiction with both scholarly and practical examples and a particular emphasis on international conflicts. This edition contains a discussion of the draft Third Restatement of Conflicts by one of its reporters; two new cases on party autonomy (Ministers and Missionaries Benefit Board v. Snow and Cotter v. Lyft, Inc.); an updated section on Internet law with new material on Internet domain names, trademark and unfair competition, and recent scholarship; a new section on the Commerce Clause and extraterritorial state regulation, including a new primary case (Association for Accessible Medicines v. Frosh); an expanded section on interstate sovereign immunity, with a new primary case (Franchise Tax Board v. Hyatt III); a new primary case on personal jurisdiction (Ford Motor Co. v. Montana Eighth Judicial District Court); new material on child abduction and the Hague Convention, focusing on Monasky v. Taglieri; new note and questions on the Alien Tort Statute, including Jesner v. Arab Bank, PLC and Nestle USA, Inc. v. Doe; updated treatment of the extraterritorial effect of intellectual property statutes; a new primary case on territoriality and constitutional remedies (Hernandez v. Mesa); a new case on the extraterritorial application of Due Process Clause (Al Hela v. Trump); and a great deal more.