Uniquely in the United States, lawyers litigate large cases on behalf of many claimants who could not afford to sue individually. In these class actions, attorneys act typically as risk-taking entrepreneurs, effectively hiring the client rather than acting as the client’s agent. Lawyer-financed, lawyer-controlled, and lawyer-settled, such entrepreneurial litigation invites lawyers to sometimes act more in their own interest than in the interest of their clients. And because class litigation aggregates many claims, defendants object that its massive scale amounts to legalized extortion. Yet, without such devices as the class action and contingent fees, many meritorious claims would never be asserted. John Coffee examines the dilemmas surroun...
The first era of the modern class action began in 1966, with revisions to Rule 23 of the Federal Rul...
Class actions have frustrated many American businesses for years. These lawsuits enable individual p...
Litigation funding—for-profit, nonrecourse funding of a litigation by a nonparty—is a new and rapidl...
Uniquely in the United States, lawyers litigate large cases on behalf of many claimants who could no...
Entrepreneurial litigation is litigation in which the plaintiff’s attorney functions as a risk-takin...
Partisans on one side of the class action debates argue that the class device is a critical enforcem...
Just as war is too important to be left to generals, civil procedure – with apologies to Clemenceau ...
Both Europe and the United States are rethinking their approach to aggregate litigation. In the Unit...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
The symbiosis that exists between entrepreneurship and law is of paramount importance in accommodati...
Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in commercial litigation funding. Whereas the judici...
Mass litigation is a relatively new phenomenon in Europe, yet it is gradually developing into an imp...
Most historians date the “modern” class action to the 1966 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil ...
In this essay, we sketch the outlines of a research agenda exploring links between courts and entrep...
Commercial actors long have argued that class actions are bad for business. But for even longer, bus...
The first era of the modern class action began in 1966, with revisions to Rule 23 of the Federal Rul...
Class actions have frustrated many American businesses for years. These lawsuits enable individual p...
Litigation funding—for-profit, nonrecourse funding of a litigation by a nonparty—is a new and rapidl...
Uniquely in the United States, lawyers litigate large cases on behalf of many claimants who could no...
Entrepreneurial litigation is litigation in which the plaintiff’s attorney functions as a risk-takin...
Partisans on one side of the class action debates argue that the class device is a critical enforcem...
Just as war is too important to be left to generals, civil procedure – with apologies to Clemenceau ...
Both Europe and the United States are rethinking their approach to aggregate litigation. In the Unit...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
The symbiosis that exists between entrepreneurship and law is of paramount importance in accommodati...
Recent years have seen an explosion of interest in commercial litigation funding. Whereas the judici...
Mass litigation is a relatively new phenomenon in Europe, yet it is gradually developing into an imp...
Most historians date the “modern” class action to the 1966 amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil ...
In this essay, we sketch the outlines of a research agenda exploring links between courts and entrep...
Commercial actors long have argued that class actions are bad for business. But for even longer, bus...
The first era of the modern class action began in 1966, with revisions to Rule 23 of the Federal Rul...
Class actions have frustrated many American businesses for years. These lawsuits enable individual p...
Litigation funding—for-profit, nonrecourse funding of a litigation by a nonparty—is a new and rapidl...