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Remarks by Bert Lockwood

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2017

Abstract

I would like to address myself to international outlaws and what domestic procedures are available to arrest their activities. While at first glance the nexus between domestic justice and international justice may seem tenuous, I wonder: Is it surprising that the same administration that is so insensate over the deprivation of the human rights of blacks in Southern Rhodesia is the same administration that proclaimed early in its tenure that if you have seen one slum you have pretty much seen them all, and hasn’t visited another since? Is it surprising that the same administration that evidences so little concern over the political rights of the majority in Rhodesia is the same administration that “bugs” and sabotages the political process within the United States?

Type
Recovering Confiscated Assets and Capturing Sanctioned Goods: Extant and Prospective Remedies
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 1973

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Footnotes

*

New York University Center for International Studies.

References

1 Strategic and Critical Materials Stock Piling Act (60 Stat. 596; 50 U.S.C. 98-98H) is amended (1) by redesignating § 10 as § 11, and; (2) by inserting after § 9 a new § 10 as follows.

“Section 10.” Notwithstanding any other provision of law, on and after January 1, 1972, the President may not prohibit or regulate the importation into the United States of any material determined to be strategic and critical pursuant to the provisions of this Act, if such material is the product of any foreign country or area not listed as a Communist-dominated country or area in general headnote 3(d) of the Tariff Schedules of the United States (19 U.S.C. 1202), for so long as the importation into the United States of material of that kind which is the product of such Communist-dominated country or area is not prohibited by any provision of law.”