Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.State and federal law often cross-reference each other to provide a rule of decision. The difficulties attendant to these cross-referenced schemes are brought to the fore most clearly when a federal court must determine whether such bodies of law create federal question jurisdiction. Indeed, the federal courts have issued scores of seemingly inconsistent opinions on these cross-referential cases. In this article, I offer an ordering principle for these apparently varied, cross-referential, jurisdictional cases. I argue that the federal courts only take federal question jurisdiction over cross-referenced claims when they, from a departmental perspective, maintain declaratory authority over...
An important group of cases over which the inferior federal courts in the United States have jurisdi...
With the adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938, Congress finally attempted to pro...
This article seeks to clear up the confusion over substantial federal questions. Part I provides a...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.State and federal law often cross-reference eac...
subject matter jurisdiction, federal question, federal courts, civil procedure State and federal law...
State and federal law often cross-reference each other to provide a rule of decision. The difficulti...
Poorly defined criteria in the area of jurisdiction are especially wasteful, generating as they ofte...
From the beginning of this nation, there have been controversies involving the division of jurisdict...
Scholars have lavished attention on the substance of jurisdictional doctrines such as standing, moot...
For some time I have been reading and listening to criticisms directed toward decisions which the Su...
This Article focuses on the issue of simplicity and predictability in analyzing federal question jur...
Part I introduces the central themes in the law of federal question jurisdiction. It describes the p...
This Article is presented in three parts. Section I traces the statutory and case development of fed...
The components of the Federal Franchise model-procedural homogeneity, cultural conformity, and techn...
Constitutional law governing personal jurisdiction in state courts inspires fascination and constern...
An important group of cases over which the inferior federal courts in the United States have jurisdi...
With the adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938, Congress finally attempted to pro...
This article seeks to clear up the confusion over substantial federal questions. Part I provides a...
Full-text available at SSRN. See link in this record.State and federal law often cross-reference eac...
subject matter jurisdiction, federal question, federal courts, civil procedure State and federal law...
State and federal law often cross-reference each other to provide a rule of decision. The difficulti...
Poorly defined criteria in the area of jurisdiction are especially wasteful, generating as they ofte...
From the beginning of this nation, there have been controversies involving the division of jurisdict...
Scholars have lavished attention on the substance of jurisdictional doctrines such as standing, moot...
For some time I have been reading and listening to criticisms directed toward decisions which the Su...
This Article focuses on the issue of simplicity and predictability in analyzing federal question jur...
Part I introduces the central themes in the law of federal question jurisdiction. It describes the p...
This Article is presented in three parts. Section I traces the statutory and case development of fed...
The components of the Federal Franchise model-procedural homogeneity, cultural conformity, and techn...
Constitutional law governing personal jurisdiction in state courts inspires fascination and constern...
An important group of cases over which the inferior federal courts in the United States have jurisdi...
With the adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure in 1938, Congress finally attempted to pro...
This article seeks to clear up the confusion over substantial federal questions. Part I provides a...