Choice of law is a mess. That much has become a truism. It is a dismal swamp, a morass of confusion, a body of doctrine killed by a realism intended to save it, and now universally said to be a disaster. One way to demonstrate its tribulations would be to look at the academic dissensus and the hopelessly underdeterminative Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws. Another would be to examine the Supreme Court\u27s abdication of the task of articulating constitutional constraints on state choice-of-law rules. This article will do both. At the outset, though, I want to suggest that one need look no further than the nomenclature of the subject. I do not mean the arcane terminology - depecage, renvoi, retorsion, false conflicts, comparati...
The debate over the proper analytical approach to choiceof- law problems continues among American le...
Fifty years ago John Willis wrote Two Approaches to the Conflict of Laws: A Comparative Study of the...
This Article is a follow-up to an earlier article, Choice of Law Outline for Texas Courts, 18 Tex. T...
Choice of law is a mess. That much has become a truism. It is a dismal swamp, a morass of confusio...
For more than a generation, choice of law has been the victim of a historical contingency. The “conf...
I have been invited to respond to a symposium on Choice of Law: How It Ought to Be. My response wi...
Choice of law is a mess—or so it is said. According to conventional wisdom, choice-of-law doctrine d...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
An American Law Institute project on the conflict of laws is preparing to bring forth a new Restatem...
Fifty years ago, at the height of modernism in all things, there was a great revolution in American ...
Choice-of-law issues have always been among the most difficult legal issues. Legal questions that ar...
This is a collection of the more important articles on conflict of laws that Professor Hancock has w...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
Choice of law is a mess-or so it is said. According to conventional wisdom, choice-of-law doctrine d...
Contractual choice of law is a universally accepted conflict of law mechanism, and it provides the p...
The debate over the proper analytical approach to choiceof- law problems continues among American le...
Fifty years ago John Willis wrote Two Approaches to the Conflict of Laws: A Comparative Study of the...
This Article is a follow-up to an earlier article, Choice of Law Outline for Texas Courts, 18 Tex. T...
Choice of law is a mess. That much has become a truism. It is a dismal swamp, a morass of confusio...
For more than a generation, choice of law has been the victim of a historical contingency. The “conf...
I have been invited to respond to a symposium on Choice of Law: How It Ought to Be. My response wi...
Choice of law is a mess—or so it is said. According to conventional wisdom, choice-of-law doctrine d...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
An American Law Institute project on the conflict of laws is preparing to bring forth a new Restatem...
Fifty years ago, at the height of modernism in all things, there was a great revolution in American ...
Choice-of-law issues have always been among the most difficult legal issues. Legal questions that ar...
This is a collection of the more important articles on conflict of laws that Professor Hancock has w...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
Choice of law is a mess-or so it is said. According to conventional wisdom, choice-of-law doctrine d...
Contractual choice of law is a universally accepted conflict of law mechanism, and it provides the p...
The debate over the proper analytical approach to choiceof- law problems continues among American le...
Fifty years ago John Willis wrote Two Approaches to the Conflict of Laws: A Comparative Study of the...
This Article is a follow-up to an earlier article, Choice of Law Outline for Texas Courts, 18 Tex. T...