The federal circuit courts of appeals have generally recognized that a party suffers real hardship when the district court erroneously orders it to disclose privileged information. Review of the disclosure order after final judgment is usually an insufficient remedy; once the information has been disclosed, it can never again be fully confidential. Consequently, the courts have struggled to provide a mechanism by which such orders can be immediately appealed. However, privilege orders presenting novel questions of law or issues of first impression do not clearly fit within the doctrinal requirements of the most common methods of interlocutory review. Appellate courts have therefore applied varying exceptions or extensions to those requireme...
This Court should grant review not only because this is a case of national importance and prominence...
Frequently in litigation in the federal courts, discovery of papers, documents and the like in the p...
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has devised a doctrine calle...
The federal circuit courts of appeals have generally recognized that a party suffers real hardship w...
This paper was first presented at the Temple Law Review Symposium on Executive Power. In Reynolds v....
Litigants in federal district courts more often are asking judges to disqualify themselves from case...
Professors Currie and Goodman present a comprehensive analysis of the variables that must be isolate...
In the absence of statutory authorization of interlocutory appeal, the writ of mandamus usually is t...
Court-access doctrine in transnational litigation is plagued by uncertainty. Without a national cour...
Case-management practices of appellate courts define the judicial review of appeals. The circuit cou...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...
We propose a fundamental restructuring of the federal civil pretrial process to address its great ex...
This Article begins in Part II by exploring a recent executive privilege case between the White Hous...
For a wide variety of claims against the government, the federal courthouse doors are closed to all ...
The government may invoke the deliberative process privilege to protect the communications of govern...
This Court should grant review not only because this is a case of national importance and prominence...
Frequently in litigation in the federal courts, discovery of papers, documents and the like in the p...
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has devised a doctrine calle...
The federal circuit courts of appeals have generally recognized that a party suffers real hardship w...
This paper was first presented at the Temple Law Review Symposium on Executive Power. In Reynolds v....
Litigants in federal district courts more often are asking judges to disqualify themselves from case...
Professors Currie and Goodman present a comprehensive analysis of the variables that must be isolate...
In the absence of statutory authorization of interlocutory appeal, the writ of mandamus usually is t...
Court-access doctrine in transnational litigation is plagued by uncertainty. Without a national cour...
Case-management practices of appellate courts define the judicial review of appeals. The circuit cou...
Case management practices of appellate courts have a significant effect on the outcome of appeals. D...
We propose a fundamental restructuring of the federal civil pretrial process to address its great ex...
This Article begins in Part II by exploring a recent executive privilege case between the White Hous...
For a wide variety of claims against the government, the federal courthouse doors are closed to all ...
The government may invoke the deliberative process privilege to protect the communications of govern...
This Court should grant review not only because this is a case of national importance and prominence...
Frequently in litigation in the federal courts, discovery of papers, documents and the like in the p...
The United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has devised a doctrine calle...