This article reviews the legal infrastructure of tools that protect debtors’ assets or income, or that enable debtors to resolve secured credit problems during ordinary times (e.g., not specific crisis interventions). Part I divides consumer protection tools into functional categories: protection of assets and future income, and retention of property subject to a security interest in default. Part II identifies the location of similar tools in federal law, uniform state law, and non-uniform state law. Part III examines implications of this divided system, with a special focus on the bundling of debtor protections and the role of intermediaries. This discussion helps the reader imagine improvements to consumer protection whether or not ...
This dissertation examines the economic effects of state and federal laws, commonly known as bankrup...
Congress recently enacted amendments to the Bankruptcy Code that possess the overarching theme of cr...
Predatory lending is an avaricious fraud that demands attention. Several states have enacted new law...
Section 364(c) and (d) of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the creation of security interests in rea...
One can view the law of creditors\u27 rights as a series of cyclesin which alternatively the rights ...
Consumers who grant security interests to creditors pay lower rates in return, but this seemingly in...
This article addresses one aspect of the law regarding the satisfaction of judgments: when a credito...
Professor Melissa B. Jacoby\u27s essay pays homage to Stewart Macaulay\u27s classic study of the Mag...
This Article explores the relationship between consumer credit markets and bankruptcy policy. In gen...
This article first summarizes the many restrictions that the American consumer bankruptcy system imp...
This Article examines the tendency of current American bankruptcy law to maintain the social and eco...
This Article will appear in a May 2009 symposium issue of the Florida International University Law R...
Bankruptcy is among the oldest of consumer protections. It is a safeguard vital to both the economy ...
Since the Middle Ages, bankruptcy laws have been concerned with preventing and deterring fraudulent ...
The aim of this article1 is to draw the attention of comparative scholars, researchers and policy-ma...
This dissertation examines the economic effects of state and federal laws, commonly known as bankrup...
Congress recently enacted amendments to the Bankruptcy Code that possess the overarching theme of cr...
Predatory lending is an avaricious fraud that demands attention. Several states have enacted new law...
Section 364(c) and (d) of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the creation of security interests in rea...
One can view the law of creditors\u27 rights as a series of cyclesin which alternatively the rights ...
Consumers who grant security interests to creditors pay lower rates in return, but this seemingly in...
This article addresses one aspect of the law regarding the satisfaction of judgments: when a credito...
Professor Melissa B. Jacoby\u27s essay pays homage to Stewart Macaulay\u27s classic study of the Mag...
This Article explores the relationship between consumer credit markets and bankruptcy policy. In gen...
This article first summarizes the many restrictions that the American consumer bankruptcy system imp...
This Article examines the tendency of current American bankruptcy law to maintain the social and eco...
This Article will appear in a May 2009 symposium issue of the Florida International University Law R...
Bankruptcy is among the oldest of consumer protections. It is a safeguard vital to both the economy ...
Since the Middle Ages, bankruptcy laws have been concerned with preventing and deterring fraudulent ...
The aim of this article1 is to draw the attention of comparative scholars, researchers and policy-ma...
This dissertation examines the economic effects of state and federal laws, commonly known as bankrup...
Congress recently enacted amendments to the Bankruptcy Code that possess the overarching theme of cr...
Predatory lending is an avaricious fraud that demands attention. Several states have enacted new law...