This paper explores the doctrine of forum non conveniens and its use throughout the common law world by a court to refuse to exercise jurisdiction that is otherwise properly enacted. It considers that the current Australian law, which focuses on a 'clearly inappropriate forum' test, is out of step with other common law jurisdictions, and that the Australian law in this area should be reformed. Such an approach is anachronistic in a globalised market for legal services, tends to reward forum shoppers, and is inconsistent with the High Court of Australia's development of choice of law rules in recent years
The Washington Supreme Court in the recent case of Lansverk v. Studebaker-Packard Corp. held the doc...
This dissertation explores how Australian private international law accommodates forum shopping in d...
Increases in the amount and complexity of international trade and changes in jurisdictional rules ov...
A historical tracing suggested that the concept of comity has its root from public international law...
Until 1988 the Australian cases on the doctrine of forum non conveniens had followed the English cas...
The United States forum non conveniens doctrine refers to the discretionary power of the court to de...
Despite the regularity with which the issue of forum non conveniens is raised by defendants in marit...
LL.M. (International Commercial law)The primary objective of this thesis is not to question or inves...
When a plaintiff files a transnational suit in the United States, the defendant will often file a fo...
Forum non conveniens is not as ancient or monolithic as U.S. courts often assume. The doctrine, whic...
It is well known that in the early stages of legal development in Commonwealth jurisdictions, when t...
When it comes to transnational litigation in the federal courts, it is time to retire the doctrine o...
To prevent plaintiffs from harassing the defendant or engaging in forum-shopping, the common law doc...
This article revisits Pacific Courts' treatment of two procedural tools for locating litigation in t...
A new legal phenomenon has emerged in recent years, as plaintiffs from developing countries have beg...
The Washington Supreme Court in the recent case of Lansverk v. Studebaker-Packard Corp. held the doc...
This dissertation explores how Australian private international law accommodates forum shopping in d...
Increases in the amount and complexity of international trade and changes in jurisdictional rules ov...
A historical tracing suggested that the concept of comity has its root from public international law...
Until 1988 the Australian cases on the doctrine of forum non conveniens had followed the English cas...
The United States forum non conveniens doctrine refers to the discretionary power of the court to de...
Despite the regularity with which the issue of forum non conveniens is raised by defendants in marit...
LL.M. (International Commercial law)The primary objective of this thesis is not to question or inves...
When a plaintiff files a transnational suit in the United States, the defendant will often file a fo...
Forum non conveniens is not as ancient or monolithic as U.S. courts often assume. The doctrine, whic...
It is well known that in the early stages of legal development in Commonwealth jurisdictions, when t...
When it comes to transnational litigation in the federal courts, it is time to retire the doctrine o...
To prevent plaintiffs from harassing the defendant or engaging in forum-shopping, the common law doc...
This article revisits Pacific Courts' treatment of two procedural tools for locating litigation in t...
A new legal phenomenon has emerged in recent years, as plaintiffs from developing countries have beg...
The Washington Supreme Court in the recent case of Lansverk v. Studebaker-Packard Corp. held the doc...
This dissertation explores how Australian private international law accommodates forum shopping in d...
Increases in the amount and complexity of international trade and changes in jurisdictional rules ov...