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Feature Articles :

History of Cannabis
  and Anti-Marijuana
  Laws in Thailand



Thailand’s Notable
  Criminal Extradition
  Cases


Guide for Tourists
  to Laws in Thailand



Neither Free nor Fair:
  Burma’s Sham Elections



Sex Laws in Thailand:
  Part 1



Renewable Energy
  in Thailand



Transsexuals and
  Thai Law



Foreign Mafia in
  Thailand

Thailand Lawyer Blog:
 Courts Order Thai
  Military to Cease
  Labeling Transsexuals
  as Mentally Ill
 Work Permit Law
  Changes in Thailand
 Bahamian Supreme Court
  Ruling Backs
  Prenuptial Agreement
 The US FATCA:
  “The Neutron Bomb
  the Global Financial
  System”?
 The Effects of the US
  Government’s Policies
  on Americans Living
  Abroad
 Chinese Assimilation
  in Thailand vs. Malaysia
 Illegal Wildlife
  Trafficking in Asia:
  Thailand as a Hub?
 Rabbi Enforcing
  Jewish Divorce Order
  Arrested by FBI
 U.S. Prenuptial
  Agreements in Thailand:
  Why Thai Law is
  Important
 US Immigration in
  Decline?
 Abortion and Family
  Planning Law in
  the Philippines
 U.S. Courts and the
  Application of Foreign
  Law to International
  Prenuptial Agreements
 Thailand Blasted by 2011
  Human Trafficking Report
 US Expats on Alert:
  New US Tax Law
  Extends IRS’s Reach
  Internationally
 Hangover 2 and
  the Thai Censors
 Thailand’s Film
  Industry Steps Up
 

 

  • 1998 Issue 2 ( Fall )
 
 
 
  • Thai Governmental Structure (Under 1997 B.E. 2540 Constitution) This article provides an overview of the Thai Governmental Structure, as set up by the most recent Constitution of 1997, including the role of the King, the Executive and Legislative branch as well as the Judiciary. Allen Briggs, the author of this article, is a member of the California Bar, and currently teaches Law at the Asian University of Science and Technology (Thailand).
 
  • US International Law Enforcement Cooperation: A Case Study In Thailand - US International Law Enforcement Cooperation: A Case Study In Thailand -by Jonathan Leeds. This article was published in the Journal of International Law and Practice of the Detroit College of Law at Michigan State University, Volume 7 Issue 1, Spring 1998. The article deals with the mechanisms that the United States uses to enforce its criminal laws outside of its own jurisdiction, and in particular, within Thailand. The article also deals with the broader policy issues involved in the exercise of US criminal jurisdiction outside of its borders. The article has been republished in the Thammasat University Law Journal (Thailand) in the December 1998 edition.
 

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