This article considers the intersection of freedom of contract and the trials that have not vanished. Could contracting parties effectively agree in advance of a dispute that any litigation of the case will comply with certain rules? Would such an agreement be enforced even in a contract of adhesion? If so, parties with sufficient bargaining leverage could design away many of the characteristics of litigation that they find unappealing, without the need to resort to private processes. The result: a designer trial with the procedural deck stacked in favor of the party with the greatest pre-dispute bargaining power. Such a clause could appear in a contract with an employer, a bank, a cell phone company, an internet service provider, a credit ...
International transactions present unique legal risks. When a contract touches several different nat...
Each essay in this dissertation analyzes an original data set to empirically investigate widely held...
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Atlantic Marine v. U.S. District Court perhaps usefully resolve...
This article considers the intersection of freedom of contract and the trials that have not vanished...
Contract theory does not address the question of how parties design contracts under the existing adv...
For a long time, arbitration was the only game in town for parties who wanted more flexibility in th...
We advance a theory explaining the use in commercial contracting of specific and vague terms (rules ...
Economic contract theory postulates two obstacles to complete contracts: high transaction costs and ...
This Article discusses a troubling cause of the decline in civil trials — the growing ubiquity of pr...
Provisions specifying the choice of law or forum in adhesive contracts can have a profound, if not d...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
Despite recent advances in our understanding of contracting behavior, economic contract theory has y...
Informed parties bargaining for their mutual advantage will tend to agree to provisions that maximiz...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
article published in law reviewAccording to the dispute resolution literature, one advantage of arbi...
International transactions present unique legal risks. When a contract touches several different nat...
Each essay in this dissertation analyzes an original data set to empirically investigate widely held...
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Atlantic Marine v. U.S. District Court perhaps usefully resolve...
This article considers the intersection of freedom of contract and the trials that have not vanished...
Contract theory does not address the question of how parties design contracts under the existing adv...
For a long time, arbitration was the only game in town for parties who wanted more flexibility in th...
We advance a theory explaining the use in commercial contracting of specific and vague terms (rules ...
Economic contract theory postulates two obstacles to complete contracts: high transaction costs and ...
This Article discusses a troubling cause of the decline in civil trials — the growing ubiquity of pr...
Provisions specifying the choice of law or forum in adhesive contracts can have a profound, if not d...
Complex business contracts are notoriously difficult to write and read. Certainly, when litigation a...
Despite recent advances in our understanding of contracting behavior, economic contract theory has y...
Informed parties bargaining for their mutual advantage will tend to agree to provisions that maximiz...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
article published in law reviewAccording to the dispute resolution literature, one advantage of arbi...
International transactions present unique legal risks. When a contract touches several different nat...
Each essay in this dissertation analyzes an original data set to empirically investigate widely held...
The Supreme Court’s 2013 decision in Atlantic Marine v. U.S. District Court perhaps usefully resolve...