In the second half of the twentieth century, the use of arbitration proliferated in the United States as part of a greater alternative dispute resolution (ADR) movement, with the promise that using ADR processes would, among other things, enhance disputants\u27 access to justice. Arbitration offers disputing parties a process to resolve their dispute, which, at least in theory, is known for decreased cost, increased speed, party control, privacy, and finality. These characteristics generally enhance parties\u27 access to justice because, as compared to litigation, barriers to entry are lower, outcomes are delivered more quickly, substantive outcomes are more equitable, and parties have a greater opportunity to be heard. However, not all twe...
Professor Frank Sander has, for many years, been one of the most prescient commentators on the alter...
These remarks, presented at the 2004 AALS Annual Meeting panel on civil procedure, review the econom...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
In the second half of the twentieth century, the use of arbitration proliferated in the United State...
Arbitration has long served as a contractual substitute for judicial litigation. It provided a worka...
Used for hundreds of years and adapted to a variety of contexts, arbitration is a form of adjudicati...
This article disputes the notion that arbitration, a historically informal process, tends to disadva...
Arbitration is not just another trial procedure. It epitomizes a practical understanding of the purp...
Arbitration is an alternative dispute resolution method (ADR) and has now become one of the preferre...
While there long have been “alternatives” to the traditional trial for those seeking to resolve disp...
Arbitration has grown rapidly during the past 20 years. Particularly notable and problematic is the ...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
In the wake of a recent three-part series by the New York Times, arbitration is now back in the eye ...
This Article argues for stabilizing and preserving arbitration\u27s necessary and valuable vocation ...
Professor Frank Sander has, for many years, been one of the most prescient commentators on the alter...
These remarks, presented at the 2004 AALS Annual Meeting panel on civil procedure, review the econom...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...
In the second half of the twentieth century, the use of arbitration proliferated in the United State...
Arbitration has long served as a contractual substitute for judicial litigation. It provided a worka...
Used for hundreds of years and adapted to a variety of contexts, arbitration is a form of adjudicati...
This article disputes the notion that arbitration, a historically informal process, tends to disadva...
Arbitration is not just another trial procedure. It epitomizes a practical understanding of the purp...
Arbitration is an alternative dispute resolution method (ADR) and has now become one of the preferre...
While there long have been “alternatives” to the traditional trial for those seeking to resolve disp...
Arbitration has grown rapidly during the past 20 years. Particularly notable and problematic is the ...
When individual consumers with little or no bargaining power have not consented to particular contra...
Those who favor the current system of virtually unlimited and unreviewable arbitration can forestall...
In the wake of a recent three-part series by the New York Times, arbitration is now back in the eye ...
This Article argues for stabilizing and preserving arbitration\u27s necessary and valuable vocation ...
Professor Frank Sander has, for many years, been one of the most prescient commentators on the alter...
These remarks, presented at the 2004 AALS Annual Meeting panel on civil procedure, review the econom...
Arbitration procedures today have become highly standardized. Institutions such as the International...