This article analyzes the traditional and law & economics explanations purporting to justify the exclusion of work product materials from discovery. It argues that none of these arguments are well founded and that, instead, the privilege increases costs and decreases the system\u27s ability to produce appropriate settlements and accurate fact finding. To the extent that the privilege serves legitimate ends, narrower and more narrowly tailored protections would provide the necessary protection
In this article, Professor Jeffrey Stempel explores the implications the decision in Haeger v. Goody...
Review Vol. 21(2) pp. 27-50. The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovat...
Courts and scholars point to the sharing economy as the most recent proof that our labor amp employm...
This article analyzes the traditional and law & economics explanations purporting to justify the exc...
This article responds to Professor Ronald Allen\u27s Work Product Revisited: A Comment on Rethinking...
Although the work-product doctrine has received considerable attention before the courts in recent y...
Work product is the legal doctrine that central casting would send over. First, it boasts profunditi...
The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovation is complicated by the imp...
The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovation is complicated by the imp...
Courts have struggled, under both a privilege theory and pure work product doctrine analysis, with t...
This article will explore both the various problems that arise with a policy that essentially mandat...
In order to understand the precise effect the Peterson holding will have on labor-relations law and ...
This Article proposes that intellectual property\u27s close relationship to property stems from the ...
The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations ...
This Article argues that employee noncompetition agreements ought to be unenforceable. It begins by ...
In this article, Professor Jeffrey Stempel explores the implications the decision in Haeger v. Goody...
Review Vol. 21(2) pp. 27-50. The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovat...
Courts and scholars point to the sharing economy as the most recent proof that our labor amp employm...
This article analyzes the traditional and law & economics explanations purporting to justify the exc...
This article responds to Professor Ronald Allen\u27s Work Product Revisited: A Comment on Rethinking...
Although the work-product doctrine has received considerable attention before the courts in recent y...
Work product is the legal doctrine that central casting would send over. First, it boasts profunditi...
The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovation is complicated by the imp...
The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovation is complicated by the imp...
Courts have struggled, under both a privilege theory and pure work product doctrine analysis, with t...
This article will explore both the various problems that arise with a policy that essentially mandat...
In order to understand the precise effect the Peterson holding will have on labor-relations law and ...
This Article proposes that intellectual property\u27s close relationship to property stems from the ...
The current debate over cost-benefit concerns in agencies\u27 evaluations of government regulations ...
This Article argues that employee noncompetition agreements ought to be unenforceable. It begins by ...
In this article, Professor Jeffrey Stempel explores the implications the decision in Haeger v. Goody...
Review Vol. 21(2) pp. 27-50. The allocation of any benefit that arises from worker-generated innovat...
Courts and scholars point to the sharing economy as the most recent proof that our labor amp employm...