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Introduction | p. v |
The Territorial Approach to Choice of Law: Concepts and Limitations | p. 1 |
Lex Loci: The Traditional Approach to Choice of Law | p. 4 |
The Lex Loci Approach in Tort Cases: The Carroll Case | p. 6 |
The Lex Loci Approach in Contract Cases: Milliken v. Pratt | p. 16 |
The Lex Loci Approach in Property Cases | p. 20 |
Other Areas | p. 22 |
"Escape Devices" | p. 22 |
Characterization | p. 23 |
Substance and Procedure | p. 30 |
Renvoi | p. 41 |
Public Policy | p. 45 |
Pleading and Proving Foreign Law | p. 52 |
Modern Approaches to Choice of Law | p. 59 |
The Scholarly Critique of the Territorial Approach | p. 59 |
New York and the "Center of Gravity" Approach: Auten and Haag | p. 61 |
Interest Analysis: The Currie Approach | p. 65 |
Choice of Law as an Exercise in Interpretation and Construction | p. 66 |
Identification of False and True Conflicts: The Heart of Interest Analysis | p. 70 |
Criticisms of the Currie Approach | p. 74 |
Identifying False Conflicts in New York: Guest Statutes and Beyond | p. 79 |
Guest Statutes in the New York Courts: Babcock, Dym, and Tooker | p. 79 |
Contiguous-Border Torts and the "Neumeier Rules" | p. 83 |
Conduct Regulation and Loss Distribution: Beyond Guest Statutes | p. 86 |
Resolving True Conflicts | p. 91 |
Currie's Approach | p. 91 |
Comparative Impairment | p. 93 |
Other Solutions: "Principles of Preference" and "Shared Policies" | p. 100 |
Territoriality Redux? | p. 103 |
The Second Restatement: The "Most Significant Relationship" | p. 104 |
Torts | p. 105 |
Contracts | p. 111 |
The Better Law | p. 113 |
Does It Matter? | p. 118 |
A Few Areas of Modern Interest | p. 119 |
A View of the Landscape | p. 119 |
Statutory Solutions to Choice of Law | p. 120 |
The "Rule of Validation," Party Autonomy, and Enforcement of Contractual Choice-of-Law Provisions | p. 122 |
Conflict of Laws and the Uniform Commercial Code | p. 133 |
Insurance Conflicts | p. 135 |
Conflicts in Products Liability Litigation: Two Examples | p. 137 |
Complex Litigation | p. 143 |
Conflicts in Cyberspace | p. 148 |
Constitutional Limitations on Choice of Law | p. 151 |
Due Process | p. 152 |
The Dick Case | p. 152 |
Values Protected by the Due Process Clause: Fairness to Individuals, Reasonable Foreseeability, and Protection from "Unfair Surprise" | p. 155 |
Full Faith and Credit | p. 156 |
The 1930s Cases on Full Faith and Credit and Choice of Law | p. 157 |
The Continuing Relevance of Pacific Employers | p. 161 |
Due Process and Full Faith and Credit, Merged | p. 162 |
Implementing Dick and Pacific Employers: The Watson and Clay Cases | p. 162 |
The Modern Cases: Hague and Shutts | p. 164 |
Full Faith and Credit, National Unity, and Sovereign Immunity | p. 168 |
The Privileges & Immunities Clause and the Problem of Discrimination in Choice of Law | p. 172 |
Other Constitutional Provisions | p. 177 |
The Obligation to Provide a Forum | p. 178 |
Hughes v. Fetter (1951) | p. 178 |
Tennessee Coal, Iron & R.R. Co. v. George (1914) | p. 181 |
Recognition of Judgments | p. 185 |
The Basics of Claim and Issue Preclusion: A Review | p. 186 |
The Terminology of Preclusion | p. 186 |
Claim Preclusion | p. 187 |
The Claim Preclusion Principle Defined | p. 189 |
The "Same Claim" | p. 189 |
The "Same Parties" | p. 193 |
A "Judgment on the Merits" | p. 199 |
Some Additional Issues | p. 202 |
Issue Preclusion | p. 206 |
The Same Issue: What Is an "Issue"? | p. 207 |
Actually Litigated and Determined | p. 208 |
Essential to the Judgment | p. 211 |
Nonmutuality in Issue Preclusion | p. 213 |
Nonmutuality, Complex and Public Law Litigation, and Class Actions | p. 220 |
The Limits of Preclusion | p. 228 |
The Difference Between Preclusion and Precedent | p. 232 |
Interjurisdictional Preclusion and Full Faith and Credit | p. 234 |
Full Faith and Credit: Article IV and 28 U.S.C. § 1738 | p. 234 |
The Basic Doctrine: Fauntleroy v. Lum | p. 236 |
Interjurisdictional Recognition and the Role of State Interests | p. 240 |
Workers' Compensation: An Exception to Full Faith and Credit? | p. 243 |
Full Faith and Credit to Judgments Rendered Without Jurisdiction | p. 248 |
Full Faith and Credit, Real Property, and Jurisdiction | p. 256 |
Full Faith and Credit to Equitable Decrees | p. 259 |
Congress's Power to Legislate Pursuant to the Full Faith and Credit Clause and the Problem of "Partial Repeal" of § 1738 | p. 263 |
Conflict of Laws and Domestic Relations | p. 275 |
Marriage | p. 275 |
Divorce | p. 281 |
Ex Parte Divorce and Full Faith and Credit: The Williams Decisions | p. 283 |
Divorce by Consent | p. 292 |
Foreign Divorces Not Subject to Full Faith and Credit | p. 297 |
Dissolution of Same-Sex Marriages and Civil Unions | p. 299 |
The Incidents of Marriage and "Divisible Divorce" | p. 300 |
Interstate Recognition of Child Custody Decrees | p. 303 |
Full Faith and Credit and Domestic Child Custody Decrees | p. 303 |
International Child Abduction: The Hague Convention | p. 309 |
Spousal and Child Support Orders | p. 312 |
The Law Applied in Federal Courts | p. 317 |
The "Erie Doctrine": An Introduction | p. 317 |
Why Discuss Erie in a Book on Conflict of Laws? | p. 318 |
The Three Broad Dimensions of the "Erie Doctrine" | p. 318 |
"Substance" vs. "Procedure" | p. 319 |
The Role of the Constitution in the "Erie Doctrine" | p. 320 |
Federal Courts Sitting in Diversity: Surrogates for State Courts or an Independent Judicial System? | p. 320 |
The Supreme Court's Messy Line of Decisions, and Not the Logically Consistent Theories of Legal Scholars, Are the Law | p. 321 |
The Vast Majority of "Erie Decisions" Have Been Rendered by the Lower Federal Courts, Not the Supreme Court | p. 322 |
The Decision in Erie R.R. v. Tompkins (1938) | p. 322 |
What Erie Got Rid Of | p. 323 |
Justice Story and Swift v. Tyson (1842) | p. 327 |
What Was Wrong (Or Became Wrong) About Swift v. Tyson? | p. 328 |
The Constitutional Basis of the Erie Decision | p. 330 |
Taking Stock of Erie | p. 335 |
The "Erie Doctrine" After Erie: From Klaxon (1941) to Walker (1980) | p. 337 |
Klaxon v. Stentor (1941) | p. 338 |
Limitations Periods: Guaranty Trust v. York (1945) | p. 341 |
More Than Forum Shopping: Byrd v. Blue Ridge (1958) | p. 344 |
The Role of the Rules Enabling Act: Hanna v. Plumer (1965) | p. 347 |
Is There an "Unavoidable Conflict"? Walker v. Armco Steel (1980) | p. 350 |
The "Erie Doctrine" After Walker v. Armco Steel | p. 355 |
Burlington Northern Ry. v. Woods (1987) | p. 355 |
Stewart Organization, Inc. v. Ricoh Corp. (1988) | p. 356 |
Gasperini: A Return to the Byrd Problem? | p. 358 |
The Latest: Semtek (2001) | p. 360 |
Federal Common Law After Erie | p. 363 |
Conflict of Laws in the International Sphere | p. 373 |
Some Introductory Comments | p. 373 |
Jurisdiction to Prescribe Under International Law | p. 375 |
The Presumption Against Extraterritoriality | p. 380 |
The Aramco Case: Title VII | p. 381 |
Extraterritorial Application of the U.S. Antitrust Laws | p. 385 |
The Presumption Against Territoriality as Applied to Other U.S. Laws | p. 392 |
Why Aren't Aramco and the Other "Extraterritoriality" Cases Treated as Choice-of-Law Cases? | p. 395 |
The Act-of-State Doctrine | p. 398 |
The Constitution and the Flag: Extraterritorial Reach of the U.S. Constitution | p. 408 |
The Status of International Law in American Courts | p. 415 |
Comparative Choice of Law: Conflicts Law Outside the United States | p. 420 |
Recognition of Foreign Judgments | p. 423 |
A Leading Case of Doubtful Modern Authority: Hilton v. Guyot (1895) | p. 423 |
Libel Tourism: A Case Study in the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign-Country Judgments | p. 427 |
Table of Cases | p. 437 |
Index | p. 443 |
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