The Eras of Extraterritoriality in the United States

Alina Veneziano
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Abstract

This article uses the research from Kal Raustiala’s book, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? : The Evolution of Territoriality in American Law, and the research from several of my articles on extraterritorial applications to explain how the United States has used the regulatory tool, extraterritoriality, since the time of the American Founding and how such use has differed as the United States gained power. The manner by which the United States has relied on extraterritoriality has differed depending on a particular era of history. For instance, this article articulates five eras that have characterized the U.S. decision-making process for extraterritoriality: cautionary, progressive, indiscriminate, withdrawal, and arbitrary. The United States within each era has embraced certain customary principles more than others such as sovereignty, territorialism, international comity, and global constitutionalism. Its reliance on these principles is volatile and changes in each era. What is remarkable is the extent to which the United States has and has not considered international issues as a part of its practice of utilizing extraterritoriality. As a young nation, the United States greatly clung to notions of sovereignty and territorialism and eschewed extraterritoriality because it was not strong enough to exert such power nor could it handle an invasion from another foreign power. Sovereignty and territorialism gave the United States the peace of mind and security against an uprising. International considerations were prominent and commonplace in the early eras. But as the nation grew in strength throughout each successive era, it no longer needed the bedrock of sovereignty and territorialism to safeguard it from other foreign powers. The United States instead sought to inject its laws extraterritorially and engage in global policing. Its rise in economic and political power gave it the strength to do so. Extraterritorial regulation was on the rise. However, the more its use of extraterritoriality rose, the more domestic struggles the United States encountered, which led to arbitrary judicial decisions and policy-making. Further, during the later eras, the United States relied less and less on international considerations and engaged in withdrawal tactics, causing some to view its behavior as hegemonic. There is a great imperative of examining history with the law. How U.S. history and politics can inform the future of the law is critical. The findings laid out within this article will serve a starting point for future research regarding potential future eras.
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美国的治外法权时代
本文引用了卡尔·劳斯蒂亚拉的著作《宪法跟随国旗吗?》:美国法律中领土的演变,以及我对治外法权应用的几篇文章的研究,以解释美国自建国以来如何使用治外法权这一监管工具,以及随着美国获得权力,这种使用有何不同。美国依靠治外法权的方式因特定的历史时代而异。例如,本文阐述了美国治外法权决策过程的五个时代特征:谨慎、渐进、不加区分、撤回和任意。在每个时代,美国都比其他国家更信奉某些习惯原则,如主权、领土主义、国际团结和全球宪政。它对这些原则的依赖是不稳定的,在每个时代都在变化。值得注意的是,美国在多大程度上把国际问题视为其利用治外法权的做法的一部分。作为一个年轻的国家,美国非常坚持主权和领土主义的观念,回避治外法权,因为它没有足够的力量来行使这种权力,也没有能力处理来自另一个外国列强的入侵。主权和领土主义使美国在面对起义时心安理得。在早期,国际考虑是突出和普遍的。但随着这个国家在每个时代的实力不断增强,它不再需要主权和领土主义的基石来保护自己免受其他外国势力的侵害。相反,美国试图将其法律注入域外,并参与全球警务。其经济和政治实力的崛起使其有能力这样做。治外法权正在增加。然而,美国使用治外法权的次数越多,它遇到的国内斗争就越多,这导致了武断的司法决定和政策制定。此外,在后来的时代,美国越来越少地依赖国际考虑,采取撤退策略,导致一些人认为其行为是霸权主义。用法律来研究历史是非常必要的。美国的历史和政治如何影响法律的未来是至关重要的。本文中列出的研究结果将为未来潜在时代的未来研究提供一个起点。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
University of Bologna Law Review
University of Bologna Law Review Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
0.20
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0.00%
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0
审稿时长
22 weeks
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