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Set-Offs in Cross-Border Bankruptcy: A Comparative Study of the United States, the European Union, Germany, Austria, and Croatia
Set-off, or the legal right to discharge reciprocal obligations in bankruptcy, is recognized inthe United States and Europe. But, despite its broad availability, this right has differentcharacteristics in each jurisdiction. As a result, this Article offers a comparative analysis of this rightin the United States and Europe. By doing so, it identifies inconsistencies and ways to overcome anysuch issues with respect to how the law of set-offs is applied in a transnational context
State v. Spokane County District Court: Use of the Necessity Defense to Address the Climate Emergency Through Civil Disobedience in Washington State
United States Patent and Trademark Office v. Booking.com: A Supreme Court Win for Established Companies May Stifle Competition
SCOTUS Fastens Circuit Court Split Regarding Willfulness Requirement for a Disgorgement of Profits Under the Lanham Act
Environmental Disasters and Water Quality: A Multifaceted Look into the Effects of Anthropogenic and Natural Disasters on Water Quality Metrics in Coastal Louisiana
Water quality plays an important role in the ecological, economical, and societal well-being of all communities. Perhaps nowhere is this more important than coastal Louisiana, with many towns subsisting primarily on maritime industry and countless communities being at the mercy of the state of the Gulf of Mexico.1 In every ecological disaster affecting coastal regions, whether natural or anthropogenic, some 2.6 million people, approximately half the population of the state, are at risk of losing their homes, their livelihoods, or even their very lives.2 Keeping the importance of water quality to these communities in mind, we set out to quantify and analyze the effects of two natural disasters (Hurricanes Rita and Harvey) and one anthropogenic ecological disaster (the BP oil spill) on salinity, pH, and dissolved oxygen (DO). These parameters are some of the most important water quality metrics for industries such as the seafood industry3, which comprises a large portion of the economy in Southern Louisiana.4 Using these metrics, we found that hurricane activity was strongly linked to changes in both salinity and pH. However, the anthropogenic ecological disaster we investigated, the BP oil spill, was not linked to significant changes to either top or bottom layer dissolved oxygen, despite the fact that chemical dispersant agents used have been linked to a lowering of DO levels.5 It is posited that this finding relates more to the distance between the Deepwater Horizon wellhead (the site of the spill) and the Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium (LUMCON) Facility in Cocodrie, Louisiana (the site of water sampling) than it does to the actual effect of these agents