Given Mississippi\u27s unique status as the only state without a class action rule, the recent developments in Mississippi joinder law, and the suggestions in Armond and Bailey that Mississippi should adopt a class action rule, scholars and practitioners from around the country gathered in Jackson, Mississippi on February 18, 2005, to debate two issues. First, should Mississippi now adopt a class action rule? Second, how should such a rule be structured? The articles in this Symposium represent the final written product of this debate. This Foreword organizes the articles by issue, provides an overview of each article, and identifies key points of agreement and dispute among the authors
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
In the first portion of this Essay, I reviewed Professor Martin Redish’s theory that the application...
This Article, prepared for a conference on the Class Action Fairness Act, examines the effect of CAF...
Given Mississippi\u27s unique status as the only state without a class action rule, the recent devel...
In my primary contribution to this Symposium, I address whether Mississippi ought to adopt a class a...
It\u27s not about whether there will be mass aggregate litigation, but how. As long as the economy f...
Symposium - Perspectives on Procedural Issues in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Ci...
Symposium - Perspectives on Procedural Issues in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Ci...
Symposium - An Analysis of Mississippi Cases Argued before the United State Supreme Court: Forewor
In this Article, I wish to suggest one place in which state courts can continue to have an impact on...
Symposium: The Sociology of Class Actions NOTE: A printing error labeled this issue Spring 1982, wh...
This study is an investigation of the power of the tort reform issue to drive the Mississippi legisl...
This Article discusses the significance of the Consumer Class Action Bill of Rights, found in sectio...
The article focuses on determination of whether a purported class action meets the requirements for ...
Mississippi’s legislature and judiciary have been locked in a constitutional standoff over procedura...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
In the first portion of this Essay, I reviewed Professor Martin Redish’s theory that the application...
This Article, prepared for a conference on the Class Action Fairness Act, examines the effect of CAF...
Given Mississippi\u27s unique status as the only state without a class action rule, the recent devel...
In my primary contribution to this Symposium, I address whether Mississippi ought to adopt a class a...
It\u27s not about whether there will be mass aggregate litigation, but how. As long as the economy f...
Symposium - Perspectives on Procedural Issues in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Ci...
Symposium - Perspectives on Procedural Issues in the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Ci...
Symposium - An Analysis of Mississippi Cases Argued before the United State Supreme Court: Forewor
In this Article, I wish to suggest one place in which state courts can continue to have an impact on...
Symposium: The Sociology of Class Actions NOTE: A printing error labeled this issue Spring 1982, wh...
This study is an investigation of the power of the tort reform issue to drive the Mississippi legisl...
This Article discusses the significance of the Consumer Class Action Bill of Rights, found in sectio...
The article focuses on determination of whether a purported class action meets the requirements for ...
Mississippi’s legislature and judiciary have been locked in a constitutional standoff over procedura...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
In the first portion of this Essay, I reviewed Professor Martin Redish’s theory that the application...
This Article, prepared for a conference on the Class Action Fairness Act, examines the effect of CAF...