This brief essay first summarizes some of that knowledge-in particular, the chief features we know about the shrinking civil trial docket in federal district courts. Next, it proposes four areas of future investigation necessary to understand the contours of the trend and to assess its causes. Then, I bring together the causal hypotheses that have already been proposed, none of which has yet been securely tested. Finally, in an appended bibliography, I list data sources, reports, and scholarly analyses that will be useful to those doing future work
This paper was prepared for the 2012 Clifford Symposium honoring Marc Galanter which was held at DeP...
This Article responds to changes proposed by Congress and the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules to r...
Recently, a respected jurist has lamented the declining number of federal jury trials. Chief Judge W...
More than a few people noticed that the American court system was seeing ever fewer trials before Ma...
This brief essay first summarizes some of that knowledge-in particular, the chief features we know a...
This Article thus highlights the need for a much larger inquiry into not only what is happening to t...
This symposium in the Journal of Dispute Resolution takes the next step. It includes some analysis o...
Outcomes determined by trials have been a steadily declining portion of case dispositions in America...
This article explores competing explanations of the data on declining rates of trials in the federal...
This essay is an invited response to Professor Ronald Wright\u27s impressive study of the fact that ...
The number of trials continues to decline andfederal civil trials have almost completely disappeared...
Some in the alternative dispute resolution community are afraid that ADR will be blamed for the appa...
This article takes a fresh look at the increasingly discussed topic of the scarcity of civil cases r...
This short essay is a summary of my assessment of the meaning of the vanishing trial phenomenon. ...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
This paper was prepared for the 2012 Clifford Symposium honoring Marc Galanter which was held at DeP...
This Article responds to changes proposed by Congress and the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules to r...
Recently, a respected jurist has lamented the declining number of federal jury trials. Chief Judge W...
More than a few people noticed that the American court system was seeing ever fewer trials before Ma...
This brief essay first summarizes some of that knowledge-in particular, the chief features we know a...
This Article thus highlights the need for a much larger inquiry into not only what is happening to t...
This symposium in the Journal of Dispute Resolution takes the next step. It includes some analysis o...
Outcomes determined by trials have been a steadily declining portion of case dispositions in America...
This article explores competing explanations of the data on declining rates of trials in the federal...
This essay is an invited response to Professor Ronald Wright\u27s impressive study of the fact that ...
The number of trials continues to decline andfederal civil trials have almost completely disappeared...
Some in the alternative dispute resolution community are afraid that ADR will be blamed for the appa...
This article takes a fresh look at the increasingly discussed topic of the scarcity of civil cases r...
This short essay is a summary of my assessment of the meaning of the vanishing trial phenomenon. ...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
This paper was prepared for the 2012 Clifford Symposium honoring Marc Galanter which was held at DeP...
This Article responds to changes proposed by Congress and the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules to r...
Recently, a respected jurist has lamented the declining number of federal jury trials. Chief Judge W...