Tulane Maritime Law Journal, Volume 39, Number 1, Winter 2014 Buy on Amazon
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Tulane Maritime Law Journal, Volume 39, Number 1, Winter 2014

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Description
The Tulane Maritime Law Journal is the preeminent student-edited law journal in the field of Admiralty and Maritime Law. Published semi-annually, each issue of the Journal includes scholarly works written by academics, practitioners, and students concerning current topics in Admiralty and Maritime Law. In addition, the Journal publishes annual sections covering Recent Developments for the United States and the international community, as well as periodic symposia on relevant topical areas and quantum and collision surveys every other year.

Volume Thirty-Nine, Number One includes

IN MEMORIAM
• “A Tribute to Professor William Tetley,” Martin Davies

ARTICLES
• “Flagging the Floating Turbine Unit: Navigating Towards a Registerable, First-Ranking Security Interest in Floating Wind Turbines,” Alexander Severance & Martin Sandgren
• “Defending Arctic Drilling Operations Against Environmentalist Pirates,” James C. Winton & Justin T. Scott

ESSAYS
• “The CMI and the Panacea of Uniformity—An Elusive Dream?” Stuart Hetherington
• “PRC Shipbuilding Disputes in London Arbitration: The Threat of Parallel Proceedings in China and the Consequences and Possible Alternatives,” Peter Murray & Lin Jiang
• “Regal-Beloit Revisited in the Reverse,” Yaakov U. Adler

COMMENTS
• “Taxation of Marine Shipping Income: A Critique of U.S. Tax Laws in the Energy Transport Industry,” Albert D. Farr
• “The Potential Application of 18 U.S.C. § 1115 to Offshore Drilling Disasters: A Requiem for the Seaman’s Manslaughter Act?” Allison Fish
• “A Court for Icarus: Defining Maritime Tort Jurisdiction in Aircraft Crash Cases,” David A. Freedman
• “Widening Gyre: The Seaman’s Expanding Right to Unearned Wages,” Bryan J. Kitz
• “The Safe-Berth Warranty and Its Critics,” David R. Maass
• “The Problem’s in the Proof: How Public Companies Can Prove Compliance with the Jones Act Vessel Citizenship Requirements for Eligibility in U.S. Coastwise Trade,” Katherine Wiarda

NOTE
• “The ‘Perils of the Sea’-man Status Question: The Fifth Circuit Falls Behind FELA’s Advancements in Remedies in Favor of the Continued Confusion Surrounding the Seaman Definition,” L. Taylor Coley
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