In ordinary litigation, parties often have different resources to devote to their lawsuit. This is a problem because the adversarial system is predicated on two (or more) parties, equal and opposite one another, making their best arguments to a neutral judge. The class action is a procedural device that aims to equalize resources between individual plaintiffs and organizational defendants by allowing plaintiffs to pool their claims. Current developments of class action doctrine, however, reinforce in the courtroom the asymmetry that exists between individual plaintiffs and organizational defendants outside the court. This Article explores these trends and the questions they raise. Why is it that critics of class actions (and some judges) ar...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
This paper studies the effects of allocation rules on the stability of mass tort class actions. I an...
Nonclass aggregate litigation is risky for plaintiffs: it falls into the gray area between individua...
In ordinary litigation, parties often have different resources to devote to their lawsuit. This is a...
As the class action device is used with increasing frequency in damages actions, there is an increas...
Class action lawyers are some of the most frequently derided players in our system of civil litigati...
According to a familiar story about class actions in the United States, aggregation promotes access ...
This paper studies the consequences of asymmetric litigation costs. Under three differ- ent protocol...
Class actions are important and useful both to deter wrongful conduct and to provide compensation fo...
In 1966, the Supreme Court promulgated an amended rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, r...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
I start from the view that small-value consumer claims are a primary reason that class actions exist...
Class action critics and proponents cling to the conventional wisdom that class actions empower clai...
The class action is one of the most controversial procedural devices in the American legal system. I...
This Article\u27s normative claim - that a rule allowing subsequent challenges to class action settl...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
This paper studies the effects of allocation rules on the stability of mass tort class actions. I an...
Nonclass aggregate litigation is risky for plaintiffs: it falls into the gray area between individua...
In ordinary litigation, parties often have different resources to devote to their lawsuit. This is a...
As the class action device is used with increasing frequency in damages actions, there is an increas...
Class action lawyers are some of the most frequently derided players in our system of civil litigati...
According to a familiar story about class actions in the United States, aggregation promotes access ...
This paper studies the consequences of asymmetric litigation costs. Under three differ- ent protocol...
Class actions are important and useful both to deter wrongful conduct and to provide compensation fo...
In 1966, the Supreme Court promulgated an amended rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, r...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
I start from the view that small-value consumer claims are a primary reason that class actions exist...
Class action critics and proponents cling to the conventional wisdom that class actions empower clai...
The class action is one of the most controversial procedural devices in the American legal system. I...
This Article\u27s normative claim - that a rule allowing subsequent challenges to class action settl...
The potential for attorneys to collude in reaching a settlement agreement arises in any large-scal...
This paper studies the effects of allocation rules on the stability of mass tort class actions. I an...
Nonclass aggregate litigation is risky for plaintiffs: it falls into the gray area between individua...