Much has been written about the origins of civil procedure. Yet little is known about the origins of criminal procedure, even though it governs how millions of cases in federal and state courts are litigated each year. This Article’s examination of criminal procedure’s origin story questions the prevailing notion that civil and criminal procedure require different treatment. The Article’s starting point is the first draft of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure—confidential in 1941 and since forgotten. The draft reveals that reformers of criminal procedure turned to the new rules of civil procedure for guidance. The contents of this draft shed light on an extraordinary moment: reformers initially proposed that all litigation in the Unite...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
This article addresses why a comparative perspective should be brought into a basic bar course like ...
This Essay, an introduction to a symposium on the Civil Side of Criminal Procedure, explains the cri...
This work, On the Inquisitorial Spectrum: The Story of Comparative Criminal Procedure, stands at the...
This article is not a mere introduction to the dossier of the Revista Brasileira de Direito Processu...
In litigation, “haves” and “have-nots” battle over what procedures should govern. Yet, much greater ...
William Stuntz\u27s recent article, The Uneasy Relationship Between Criminal Procedure and Criminal ...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
Like many legal academics, Professor Donald Dripps believes that the Supreme Court\u27s criminal pro...
After more than two decades of vigorous debate, the original Federal Rules of Civil Procedure became...
After more than two decades of vigorous debate, the original Federal Rules of Civil Procedure became...
After the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (1938) established a uniform set of procedures for the tr...
While Ohio’s Rules of Criminal Procedure, effective July 1, 1973, are entirely new to the criminal l...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
This article addresses why a comparative perspective should be brought into a basic bar course like ...
This Essay, an introduction to a symposium on the Civil Side of Criminal Procedure, explains the cri...
This work, On the Inquisitorial Spectrum: The Story of Comparative Criminal Procedure, stands at the...
This article is not a mere introduction to the dossier of the Revista Brasileira de Direito Processu...
In litigation, “haves” and “have-nots” battle over what procedures should govern. Yet, much greater ...
William Stuntz\u27s recent article, The Uneasy Relationship Between Criminal Procedure and Criminal ...
Since the 1930s, the proportion of civil cases concluded at trial has declined from about 20% to bel...
The constitutional law of state criminal procedure was born between the First and Second World Wars....
Like many legal academics, Professor Donald Dripps believes that the Supreme Court\u27s criminal pro...
After more than two decades of vigorous debate, the original Federal Rules of Civil Procedure became...
After more than two decades of vigorous debate, the original Federal Rules of Civil Procedure became...
After the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (1938) established a uniform set of procedures for the tr...
While Ohio’s Rules of Criminal Procedure, effective July 1, 1973, are entirely new to the criminal l...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
This article addresses why a comparative perspective should be brought into a basic bar course like ...