Class action critics and proponents cling to the conventional wisdom that class actions empower claimants. Critics complain that class actions over-empower claimants and put defendants at a disadvantage, while proponents defend class actions as essential to consumer protection and rights enforcement. This Article explores how class action settlements sometimes do the opposite. Aggregation empowers claimants’ lawyers by consolidating power in the lawyers’ hands. Consolidation of power allows defendants to strike deals that benefit themselves and claimants’ lawyers while disadvantaging claimants. This Article considers the phenomenon of aggregation as disempowerment by looking at specific settlement features that benefit plaintiffs’ counsel a...
This Article develops normative and doctrinal innovations to cope with a pivotal yet undertheorized ...
This Article explores a central theme that ties together rationales to exit aggregation of tort clai...
It is odd, considering how often lawyers engage in aggregate settlements, that no one seems able to ...
Class action critics and proponents cling to the conventional wisdom that class actions empower clai...
Class actions are important and useful both to deter wrongful conduct and to provide compensation fo...
In two recent and highly technical decisions – Amchem Products v. Windsor and Ortiz v. Fibreboard Co...
The article focuses on a new strategy to anti-aggregation agreements, contractual provisions which...
Aggregate litigation’s potential as a tool for the disempowered is not being realized. Class actions...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
From BP’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico to the National Football League’s (NFL) inability to honor...
Aggregation has long been viewed as the primary if not sole vehicle for mass claims resolution. For ...
his Article uses two recent decisions -one prohibiting incentive awards to class representatives and...
In this Article, we discuss examples of class action settlements in which the conduct allegedly enga...
Miller and Singer offer a theoretical and empirical analysis of nonpecuniary class action settlement...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
This Article develops normative and doctrinal innovations to cope with a pivotal yet undertheorized ...
This Article explores a central theme that ties together rationales to exit aggregation of tort clai...
It is odd, considering how often lawyers engage in aggregate settlements, that no one seems able to ...
Class action critics and proponents cling to the conventional wisdom that class actions empower clai...
Class actions are important and useful both to deter wrongful conduct and to provide compensation fo...
In two recent and highly technical decisions – Amchem Products v. Windsor and Ortiz v. Fibreboard Co...
The article focuses on a new strategy to anti-aggregation agreements, contractual provisions which...
Aggregate litigation’s potential as a tool for the disempowered is not being realized. Class actions...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
From BP’s oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico to the National Football League’s (NFL) inability to honor...
Aggregation has long been viewed as the primary if not sole vehicle for mass claims resolution. For ...
his Article uses two recent decisions -one prohibiting incentive awards to class representatives and...
In this Article, we discuss examples of class action settlements in which the conduct allegedly enga...
Miller and Singer offer a theoretical and empirical analysis of nonpecuniary class action settlement...
Today, virtually everyone has a proposal for reforming class action litigation but both consensus ...
This Article develops normative and doctrinal innovations to cope with a pivotal yet undertheorized ...
This Article explores a central theme that ties together rationales to exit aggregation of tort clai...
It is odd, considering how often lawyers engage in aggregate settlements, that no one seems able to ...