Aviation Law Reporter from CCH has been the authoritative source for aviation-related court cases, regulations, treaties, and agency decisions since 1947, and is a must-have for aviation corporate executives, legal counsel, airlines, airports, regulators and aircraft manufacturers. This comprehensive resource enables you to keep current on air law's rapidly changing regulatory and liability landscape. It also provides complete coverage of the federal regulation of civil aviation — everything from instructor certification to flight rules to new drug testing requirements, plus state aviation laws, international agreements and current reporting of relevant federal and state cases. Five loose-leaf volumes (or Internet/CD-ROM versions) contain all the tools you need to comply with current civil aviation laws or litigate aviation-related cases. Subscribe today to:
Benefits
Ensure your compliance with frequent updates - Aviation Law Reporter is updated twice per month to ensure that you have the most current information available. Each Report consists of replacement loose-leaf pages with the latest developments in the field, plus a multi-page
Report Letter that summarizes those changes. Recent Report Letters have included up-to-the-minute details on proposed airline security measures, the new FAA sport pilot licensing program and the assignment of new takeoff and landing rights at congested airports. The Report Letter's convenient format (headlined articles with references to the replacement loose-leaf pages) makes it easy to stay up-to-date and
distribute among your colleagues.
Get all the facts on new aviation industry developments - As the regulatory emphasis shifts to safety and security, your customers' functions will change as well. Aviation Law Reporter allows you to stay abreast of new developments as they occur and helps you anticipate your clients' needs and serve them better. Here is just a sample of recent developments that affect the aviation industry:
Antitrust effects of air carrier alliances
Airport slot allocation
New international air cargo rules due to U.S. adoption of Montreal Protocol No. 4 and the Montreal Convention
Applicability of the Death on the High Seas Act to air transportation
New alcohol and drug screening regulations
Research is a snap with Aviation Law Reporter - CCH's organization and finding aids make it easy to pinpoint the information you need. Tabbed sections, tables of contents and various indices help you search efficiently and successfully-every time.
Summary of Contents
Public International Law International Civil Aviation Organization Private International Law -- Warsaw and Montreal Conventions with relevant protocols