Res judicata is hard enough already. Consider it at the interjurisdictional level, and we are asking for headaches. But consider it at that level we must, because litigation trends make interjurisdictional preclusion more important than ever. Lawyers, judges, litigants, and other litigation participants increasingly must contemplate the possibility that a lawsuit will have claim-preclusive or issue-preclusive effect in a subsequent suit in another jurisdiction. With great frequency, multiple lawsuits arise out of single or related transactions or events. Mass tort litigation and complex commercial litigation provide the most emphatic examples, but the phenomenon of multiple related lawsuits extends to every comer of litigation, including in...
The boundaries of federal multidistrict litigation (MDL) are blurring, as district courts seek innov...
One of the prevailing myths of transnational litigation is that U.S. courts are not only ready but e...
Conventional wisdom suggests that the transnational litigation system is essentially unipolar, or pe...
Res judicata is hard enough already. Consider it at the interjurisdictional level, and we are asking...
The interrelation of lawsuits is one of the most troublesome, yet least commented upon, areas of the...
Preclusion is not a simple principle; it is a multifaceted concept affected by a number of relevant ...
Parallel litigation--a dispute generating multiple lawsuits--is not a new phenomenon and is not limi...
In criminal litigation, similar doctrines have been invoked. Double jeopardy has precluded a second ...
The courts and the authorities have reached something of a consensus on the matter of issue preclusi...
Parallel litigation is difficult to define and sometimes means what the speaker wants it to mean. It...
Parallel litigation is difficult to define and sometimes means what the speaker wants it to mean. It...
During the 2005 survey year, federal courts in the Second Circuit decided a number of important res ...
This thesis will examine how legal systems deal with the phenomenon of multiple assumptions of juris...
During the 1999-2000 survey year the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has issue...
The topic of Mass and Repetitive Litigation in the Federal Courts is even more vast and unwieldy t...
The boundaries of federal multidistrict litigation (MDL) are blurring, as district courts seek innov...
One of the prevailing myths of transnational litigation is that U.S. courts are not only ready but e...
Conventional wisdom suggests that the transnational litigation system is essentially unipolar, or pe...
Res judicata is hard enough already. Consider it at the interjurisdictional level, and we are asking...
The interrelation of lawsuits is one of the most troublesome, yet least commented upon, areas of the...
Preclusion is not a simple principle; it is a multifaceted concept affected by a number of relevant ...
Parallel litigation--a dispute generating multiple lawsuits--is not a new phenomenon and is not limi...
In criminal litigation, similar doctrines have been invoked. Double jeopardy has precluded a second ...
The courts and the authorities have reached something of a consensus on the matter of issue preclusi...
Parallel litigation is difficult to define and sometimes means what the speaker wants it to mean. It...
Parallel litigation is difficult to define and sometimes means what the speaker wants it to mean. It...
During the 2005 survey year, federal courts in the Second Circuit decided a number of important res ...
This thesis will examine how legal systems deal with the phenomenon of multiple assumptions of juris...
During the 1999-2000 survey year the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit has issue...
The topic of Mass and Repetitive Litigation in the Federal Courts is even more vast and unwieldy t...
The boundaries of federal multidistrict litigation (MDL) are blurring, as district courts seek innov...
One of the prevailing myths of transnational litigation is that U.S. courts are not only ready but e...
Conventional wisdom suggests that the transnational litigation system is essentially unipolar, or pe...