The United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (or MDL Panel ) is one of a small number of special federal courts created pursuant to Article III by Congress and staffed by a Chief-Justice-appointed group of Article III judges for limited terms. The MDL Panel is a powerful judicial institution with substantial discretion over complex litigation in the United States. For all practical purposes, it controls where many of the most far-reaching and significant private civil actions will be resolved which can affect procedural and substantive rights of the parties. An understanding of who has served on the MDL Panel would shed light on both its structure and its decisions. In this article, we provided an analysis of the compositio...
In the final panel of the conference, three judges and two media relations officials discuss the rol...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
While multi-district litigation promises plaintiffs and defendants flexibility in litigating and set...
article published in law journalThe United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (or "MD...
The article focuses on various issues related to multidistrict litigation (MDL). Topics discussed in...
Professor Elizabeth Chamblee Burch presented Judging Multidistrict Litigation at Duke University S...
The article focuses on the procedural, substantive, and communal benefits of remanding multidistrict...
In federal multidistrict litigation (MDL), district courts regularly appoint attorneys to manage the...
Peeking under the tent of our nation\u27s largest and often most impactful cases reveals that judges...
This article investigates two issues unexplored in studies of the relationship between panel composi...
Litigation against the Trump Administration has proliferated rapidly since the inauguration. As case...
The article focuses on the need of remand in multidistrict litigation under the 1968 Multidistrict L...
Assistant Professor Anne Mullins recently attended a judicial panel hosted by the University of Chic...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
My focus here is on a cost that has been surprisingly neglected by scholars but may be the greatest ...
In the final panel of the conference, three judges and two media relations officials discuss the rol...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
While multi-district litigation promises plaintiffs and defendants flexibility in litigating and set...
article published in law journalThe United States Judicial Panel on Multidistrict Litigation (or "MD...
The article focuses on various issues related to multidistrict litigation (MDL). Topics discussed in...
Professor Elizabeth Chamblee Burch presented Judging Multidistrict Litigation at Duke University S...
The article focuses on the procedural, substantive, and communal benefits of remanding multidistrict...
In federal multidistrict litigation (MDL), district courts regularly appoint attorneys to manage the...
Peeking under the tent of our nation\u27s largest and often most impactful cases reveals that judges...
This article investigates two issues unexplored in studies of the relationship between panel composi...
Litigation against the Trump Administration has proliferated rapidly since the inauguration. As case...
The article focuses on the need of remand in multidistrict litigation under the 1968 Multidistrict L...
Assistant Professor Anne Mullins recently attended a judicial panel hosted by the University of Chic...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
My focus here is on a cost that has been surprisingly neglected by scholars but may be the greatest ...
In the final panel of the conference, three judges and two media relations officials discuss the rol...
In cases heard by multimember courts, one judge usually has the primary responsibility for assigning...
While multi-district litigation promises plaintiffs and defendants flexibility in litigating and set...