CIT Posts Materials from Judicial Conference
The Court of International Trade posted a number of articles related to its Judicial Conference (here), held on Dec. 1. The materials include:
- Veil-Piercing in Customs Enforcement Proceedings: The Role of Federal Common Law by Joshua Kurland of the Justice Department (here)
- Streamlining Discovery: Does The Nature Of The Practice Before The U.S. Court Of International Trade Provide Suggestions For How To Accomplish It? by Beverly Farrell of the Justice Department (here)
- Where Three Is Not A Crowd: What Outside Parties Can Do To Enhance Cooperation Between Enforcement and Compliance and Customs and Border Protection by Deborah King of the Commerce Department (here)
- Remands are a Consequence of Administrative Law So Why Are We All So Frustrated? by Michele Lynch of the Commerce Department (here)
- Responding to Customs and Border Protection's Requests for Factual Information: Responsibilities, Burdens & Consequences by Frances Hadfield of Grunfeld Desiderio (here)
- Interactions Between the USITC, Other Trade Agencies, and the Courts: Examples from AD/CVD and Section 337 Investigations by Shara Aranoff of Covington & Burling (here)
- No Reservations: A Proposal to Streamline Reserve Calendar Practice in the U.S. Court of International Trade by Russell Semmel of Neville Peterson (here)