Congress is endeavoring to enact comprehensive legislation that will bring many changes to bankruptcy law. It is presently studying two proposed bankruptcy bills: the Commission Bill, proposed by a Congressionally established study commission; and the Judges\u27 Bill, submitted by the National Conference of Bankruptcy Judges. The author compares the major significant proposals of these two bills and analyzes their impact on reform of bankruptcy law
bankruptcy process as an "assembly of administrative and fiscal error and confusion [which] has...
In the last fifteen years or so, lawyers working in law and economics and economists with an interes...
In this brief musing I will describe one of the many bases for concluding that when one tracks throu...
Congress is endeavoring to enact comprehensive legislation that will bring many changes to bankruptc...
Congress is considering a bill to amend the 1978 Bankruptcy Code. According to Professor Frank R. Ke...
As this Review was being written, Congress once again failed to pass the bipartisan bankruptcy-refor...
This article provides an overview of current bankruptcy law and filing trends in the United States. ...
This article examines the effort to maximize judicial control over the bankruptcy process and its im...
The decision by the Board of Editors of the Mississippi College Law Review to publish a bankruptcy s...
The new bankruptcy act is a failure. Its shortcomings show that we need to change the way we think a...
Congress has concluded that the voyage of consumer bankruptcy in the United States is off course and...
This issue of the VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW contains two outstanding student pieces on bankruptcy law. F...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
Congress is currently considering new bankruptcy legislation. To date, its focus has been on two bil...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
bankruptcy process as an "assembly of administrative and fiscal error and confusion [which] has...
In the last fifteen years or so, lawyers working in law and economics and economists with an interes...
In this brief musing I will describe one of the many bases for concluding that when one tracks throu...
Congress is endeavoring to enact comprehensive legislation that will bring many changes to bankruptc...
Congress is considering a bill to amend the 1978 Bankruptcy Code. According to Professor Frank R. Ke...
As this Review was being written, Congress once again failed to pass the bipartisan bankruptcy-refor...
This article provides an overview of current bankruptcy law and filing trends in the United States. ...
This article examines the effort to maximize judicial control over the bankruptcy process and its im...
The decision by the Board of Editors of the Mississippi College Law Review to publish a bankruptcy s...
The new bankruptcy act is a failure. Its shortcomings show that we need to change the way we think a...
Congress has concluded that the voyage of consumer bankruptcy in the United States is off course and...
This issue of the VANDERBILT LAW REVIEW contains two outstanding student pieces on bankruptcy law. F...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
Congress is currently considering new bankruptcy legislation. To date, its focus has been on two bil...
Those that backed the 2005 bankruptcy reform law argued that it would protect creditors from consume...
bankruptcy process as an "assembly of administrative and fiscal error and confusion [which] has...
In the last fifteen years or so, lawyers working in law and economics and economists with an interes...
In this brief musing I will describe one of the many bases for concluding that when one tracks throu...