Commercial parties have long enjoyed significant autonomy in questions of substantive law. However, litigants do not have anywhere near the same amount of freedom to decide procedural matters. Instead, parties in litigation are generally considered to be subject to the procedural law of the forum court.Although this particular conflict of laws rule has been in place for many years, a number of recent developments have challenged courts and commentators to consider whether and to what extent procedural rules should be considered mandatory in nature. If procedural rules are not mandatory but are instead merely “sticky” defaults, then it may be possible for commercial actors to create private procedural contracts that identify the procedural r...
This paper examines both the theoretical underpinnings and empirical picture of procedural contracts...
Civil procedure is traditionally conceived of as a body of publicly-set rules, with limited carve-ou...
Procedural Justice offers a theory of procedural fairness for civil dispute resolution. The Article ...
General principles of law have long been central to the practice and scholarship of both public and ...
Commercial parties author the substantive terms of their contracts. Of course, they do not and canno...
The law chosen to govern the merits of an international contract dispute does not always lead to res...
In recent years, the Federal Circuit has made an effort to rein in excessive or unfounded patent dam...
Private resolution and public adjudication of disputes are commonly seen as discrete, antipodal proc...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
A majority of international commercial contracts include an arbitration clause which in the event of...
Contract theory has long posited that parties can maximize contract value by manipulating the proced...
Introduction to Zoom-out n. 61 on "Procedural Law of International Courts and Tribunals: Between Cha...
In this article I will first deal with the power of the International Court of Justice to adopt rule...
Sometimes the rules let you change the rules. In civil procedure, many rules are famously rigid—for ...
When a federal court resolves equipoise in its effort to determine the contours of a litigant class ...
This paper examines both the theoretical underpinnings and empirical picture of procedural contracts...
Civil procedure is traditionally conceived of as a body of publicly-set rules, with limited carve-ou...
Procedural Justice offers a theory of procedural fairness for civil dispute resolution. The Article ...
General principles of law have long been central to the practice and scholarship of both public and ...
Commercial parties author the substantive terms of their contracts. Of course, they do not and canno...
The law chosen to govern the merits of an international contract dispute does not always lead to res...
In recent years, the Federal Circuit has made an effort to rein in excessive or unfounded patent dam...
Private resolution and public adjudication of disputes are commonly seen as discrete, antipodal proc...
The Freshfields Lecture for 2002 questions the wisdom of unfettered arbitrator discretion. The autho...
A majority of international commercial contracts include an arbitration clause which in the event of...
Contract theory has long posited that parties can maximize contract value by manipulating the proced...
Introduction to Zoom-out n. 61 on "Procedural Law of International Courts and Tribunals: Between Cha...
In this article I will first deal with the power of the International Court of Justice to adopt rule...
Sometimes the rules let you change the rules. In civil procedure, many rules are famously rigid—for ...
When a federal court resolves equipoise in its effort to determine the contours of a litigant class ...
This paper examines both the theoretical underpinnings and empirical picture of procedural contracts...
Civil procedure is traditionally conceived of as a body of publicly-set rules, with limited carve-ou...
Procedural Justice offers a theory of procedural fairness for civil dispute resolution. The Article ...