Public-law litigation often gives rise to a basic but important asymmetry: claimants wishing to obtain a particular form of redress for a particular legal wrong must satisfy all the relevant procedural, substantive, and remedial prerequisites to the issuance of judicial relief. In contrast, governments wishing to avoid the issuance of that remedy need only demonstrate that a single such requirement operates in their favor. This Article considers the extent to which this asymmetry influences the development of the law. Specifically, this Article hypothesizes that, where the remediation of a right depends on a claimant’s satisfaction of multiple, mutually necessary procedural, substantive, and remedial rules, it will often be easier for court...
This Article describes and interrogates a phenomenon of spillovers across remedies—how the legal sta...
This article expands upon the idea that repeat players influence the devel-opment of law by settling...
This article argues that Article I courts can use equitable principles to provide individuals who ha...
Often, private law remedies enforce or vindicate infringed underlying rights. Substantive remedies a...
In this Article, we demonstrate, contrary to conventional wisdom, that all rights are relationally c...
The conventional account of our remedial tradition recognizes that courts may engage in discretionar...
The conventional account of our remedial tradition recognizes that courts may engage in discretionar...
Modern society is characterized by heightened complexity in the degree of interdependence among its ...
This Article examines the development of recoupment by first comparing and contrasting other equitab...
This Article describes and evaluates the evolution of rights doctrines in the United States, focusin...
This article makes the point that one cannot understand fully the nature of the remedies granted by ...
Law mediates between the ideal and the real. American constitutional law, in particular, is a realm ...
IT IS a common experience with a teacher of law to find in every department of the subject a number ...
Discussions regarding diminishing access to justice have centered on the high disputing costs, gradu...
Should law respond readily to society’s evolving views, or should it remain fixed? This is the quest...
This Article describes and interrogates a phenomenon of spillovers across remedies—how the legal sta...
This article expands upon the idea that repeat players influence the devel-opment of law by settling...
This article argues that Article I courts can use equitable principles to provide individuals who ha...
Often, private law remedies enforce or vindicate infringed underlying rights. Substantive remedies a...
In this Article, we demonstrate, contrary to conventional wisdom, that all rights are relationally c...
The conventional account of our remedial tradition recognizes that courts may engage in discretionar...
The conventional account of our remedial tradition recognizes that courts may engage in discretionar...
Modern society is characterized by heightened complexity in the degree of interdependence among its ...
This Article examines the development of recoupment by first comparing and contrasting other equitab...
This Article describes and evaluates the evolution of rights doctrines in the United States, focusin...
This article makes the point that one cannot understand fully the nature of the remedies granted by ...
Law mediates between the ideal and the real. American constitutional law, in particular, is a realm ...
IT IS a common experience with a teacher of law to find in every department of the subject a number ...
Discussions regarding diminishing access to justice have centered on the high disputing costs, gradu...
Should law respond readily to society’s evolving views, or should it remain fixed? This is the quest...
This Article describes and interrogates a phenomenon of spillovers across remedies—how the legal sta...
This article expands upon the idea that repeat players influence the devel-opment of law by settling...
This article argues that Article I courts can use equitable principles to provide individuals who ha...