| Crosby V. National Foreign Trade Council |
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| 2000 in law | |
| united states supreme court cases | |
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''Crosby v. National Foreign Trade Council'', 530 U.S. 363 ( 2000 ), was a case in which the Supreme Court Of The United States used the Preemption doctrine to strike down a law that prohibited Massachusetts from buying goods and services from companies that conducted business with Myanmar (Burma). The Court reasoned that the U.S. Congress had already passed a law imposing sanctions on Myanmar, and that the Massachusetts law "undermine {Link without Title} the intended purpose and 'natural effect' of at least three provisions of the federal Act, that is, its delegation of effective discretion to the President to control economic sanctions against Burma, its limitation of sanctions solely to United States persons and new investment, and its directive to the President to proceed diplomatically in developing a comprehensive, multilateral strategy towards Burma." EXTERNAL LINKS |