Disputing parties who are unable to settle their differences will end up before an adjudicator (typically a judge or jury) who will decide their dispute for them. Dispute resolution scholars have long theorized that disputants bargain in the shadow of this adjudicated outcome, predicting what would happen in court substantively and procedurally, and negotiating based on an assessment of the strength of “bargaining endowments” derived from applicable legal norms. The increasing use of arbitration to resolve commercial disputes in the U.S. means that more and more disputants are negotiating in the shadow of arbitration, not litigation. This Article explores how procedural differences between arbitration and litigation impact disputants who ba...
Increasingly, arbitration is becoming used to resolve bargaining disputes in a variety of settings. ...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
The Supreme Court has decided more than two dozen cases—arising primarily from commercial, consumer,...
Disputing parties who are unable to settle their differences will end up before an adjudicator (typi...
Most fields of law provide guidance on how courts decide cases. In contrast, arbitration law tells j...
Informed parties bargaining for their mutual advantage will tend to agree to provisions that maximiz...
The displacement thesis, which frames the current debate about arbitration, seems to commit a catego...
Do arbitrators create precedent? The claim that they do not recurs throughout much of the arbitratio...
This Article discusses a troubling cause of the decline in civil trials — the growing ubiquity of pr...
Adhesive consumer arbitration agreements pose questions that go beyond the problems of adhesion cont...
Supreme Court rhetoric about the role of contracts and contract law in arbitration jurisprudence dif...
This Article proposes a new form of dispute resolution, Expected Value Arbitration or “EVA.” It wou...
This Article argues for stabilizing and preserving arbitration\u27s necessary and valuable vocation ...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
The Supreme Court\u27s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act is universally touted as favori...
Increasingly, arbitration is becoming used to resolve bargaining disputes in a variety of settings. ...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
The Supreme Court has decided more than two dozen cases—arising primarily from commercial, consumer,...
Disputing parties who are unable to settle their differences will end up before an adjudicator (typi...
Most fields of law provide guidance on how courts decide cases. In contrast, arbitration law tells j...
Informed parties bargaining for their mutual advantage will tend to agree to provisions that maximiz...
The displacement thesis, which frames the current debate about arbitration, seems to commit a catego...
Do arbitrators create precedent? The claim that they do not recurs throughout much of the arbitratio...
This Article discusses a troubling cause of the decline in civil trials — the growing ubiquity of pr...
Adhesive consumer arbitration agreements pose questions that go beyond the problems of adhesion cont...
Supreme Court rhetoric about the role of contracts and contract law in arbitration jurisprudence dif...
This Article proposes a new form of dispute resolution, Expected Value Arbitration or “EVA.” It wou...
This Article argues for stabilizing and preserving arbitration\u27s necessary and valuable vocation ...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
The Supreme Court\u27s interpretation of the Federal Arbitration Act is universally touted as favori...
Increasingly, arbitration is becoming used to resolve bargaining disputes in a variety of settings. ...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
The Supreme Court has decided more than two dozen cases—arising primarily from commercial, consumer,...