This Article presents the first comprehensive study of an intriguing and increasingly pervasive practice that is transforming civil litigation worldwide: US judges now routinely compel discovery in this country and make it available for disputes and parties not before US courts. In the past decade and a half, federal courts have received and granted thousands of such discovery requests for use in foreign civil proceedings governed by different procedural rules. I call this global role played by US courts the “export” of American discovery. This Article compiles and analyzes a data set of over three thousand foreign discovery requests filed between 2005 and 2017 under 28 USC §1782—an expansive statute that is now the pivotal law governing th...
This note examines the international efforts undertaken by nations collectively and individually to ...
This Essay addresses issues involving the discovery of information located outside the United States...
It is widely claimed that the level of transnational litigation in U.S. courts is high and increasin...
This Article presents the first comprehensive study of an intriguing and increasingly pervasive prac...
U.S. Courts generally prefer applying the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure over The Hague Evidence C...
This article presents an in-depth analysis of the latent methodological issues that are as much a ca...
The scope of pretrial discovery in the United States (“U.S.”) is the most expansive of any common la...
Discovery of evidence that is not available in the United States is a frequent problem in internatio...
American procedure regarding international discovery stems from 28 U.S.C. §§ 1781-83, and Federal Ru...
Limited discovery is one of the regularly cited advantages of international arbitration, as opposed ...
This Issue Brief explores an oft-neglected irony in international e-discovery: the rationales used b...
United States courts are demanding that businesses break foreign laws at an exponentially increasing...
The article begins with a discussion of the historical development and jurisprudential bases for jur...
American procedure regarding international discovery stems from 28 U.S.C. §§ 1781-1783, and the Fede...
U.S. law provides litigants with a variety of means to obtain evidence from foreign jurisdictions. T...
This note examines the international efforts undertaken by nations collectively and individually to ...
This Essay addresses issues involving the discovery of information located outside the United States...
It is widely claimed that the level of transnational litigation in U.S. courts is high and increasin...
This Article presents the first comprehensive study of an intriguing and increasingly pervasive prac...
U.S. Courts generally prefer applying the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure over The Hague Evidence C...
This article presents an in-depth analysis of the latent methodological issues that are as much a ca...
The scope of pretrial discovery in the United States (“U.S.”) is the most expansive of any common la...
Discovery of evidence that is not available in the United States is a frequent problem in internatio...
American procedure regarding international discovery stems from 28 U.S.C. §§ 1781-83, and Federal Ru...
Limited discovery is one of the regularly cited advantages of international arbitration, as opposed ...
This Issue Brief explores an oft-neglected irony in international e-discovery: the rationales used b...
United States courts are demanding that businesses break foreign laws at an exponentially increasing...
The article begins with a discussion of the historical development and jurisprudential bases for jur...
American procedure regarding international discovery stems from 28 U.S.C. §§ 1781-1783, and the Fede...
U.S. law provides litigants with a variety of means to obtain evidence from foreign jurisdictions. T...
This note examines the international efforts undertaken by nations collectively and individually to ...
This Essay addresses issues involving the discovery of information located outside the United States...
It is widely claimed that the level of transnational litigation in U.S. courts is high and increasin...