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The Canon at the Water's EdgeThomas B. BennettNew York University School of Law February 29, 2012 New York University Law Review, Vol. 87, p. 207, April 2012 Abstract: What motivates substantive presumptions about how to interpret statutes? Are they like statistical heuristics that aim to predict Congress’s most likely behavior, or are they meant to protect certain underenforced values against inadvertent legislative encroachment? These two rationales, fact-based and value-based, are the extremes of a continuum. This Note uses the presumption against extraterritoriality to demonstrate this continuum and how a presumption can shift along it. The presumption operates to diminish the likelihood that a federal statute will be read to extend beyond the borders of the United States. The presumption has been remarkably stable for decades despite watershed changes in the principles — customary international law and conflict of laws — that once supported it. As the presumption’s normative justifications have diminished, a new justification has grown in importance. Today, the presumption is often justified as a stand-in for how Congress typically legislates. This Note argues that this change makes the presumption less defensible but even harder to overcome in individual cases.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 41 Keywords: statutory interpretation, presumption against extraterritoriality, statutory canons, legislation Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: February 29, 2012 ; Last revised: April 2, 2012Suggested CitationContact Information
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