American legal scholars spend a large proportion of their time debating and theorizing procedure. This Article focuses on American proceduralism in the particular field of civil justice and undertakes a detailed comparison with England, where procedural questions receive little academic attention. It finds that procedure is more prominent in America partly because Americans have been more willing than others to use private litigation as a tool for regulation. More significantly, procedural questions necessarily occupy more space in American debates because authority over civil justice is unusually dispersed among different actors; procedural rules allocate power among these actors. But American proceduralism runs deeper than these surface e...
In this dissertation, I explore the relationship between legal theory and legal practice. My focus i...
ABSTRACT. The United States is the home of judicialization or, perhaps more accurately in this case,...
Originally prepared for the 2007 meetings of the Italian Association of Comparative Law, this paper ...
American legal scholars spend a large proportion of their time debating and theorizing procedure. Th...
The law proceduralists write about and teach is nothing like what most ordinary Americans experience...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
This article surveys five approaches to justice in contemporary Anglo-American legal thought: pure p...
"Drawing on political, social and economic theory, this book focuses on the English civil justice sy...
This article provides a brief historical explanation of the role that juries have played in Anglo-Am...
This article asks whether the way in which procedure is taught has an impact on the extent and accom...
What difference does the teaching of civil procedure as an academic subject make to the practice of ...
In 1848, New York enacted a code of civil procedure that powerfully influenced the common law world....
the most vulnerable institution[s] " because of the public's "lack of appre-ciation f...
Much has been written about the origins of civil procedure. Yet little is known about the origins of...
This article reports on present and past efforts at civil justice reform in the United States and as...
In this dissertation, I explore the relationship between legal theory and legal practice. My focus i...
ABSTRACT. The United States is the home of judicialization or, perhaps more accurately in this case,...
Originally prepared for the 2007 meetings of the Italian Association of Comparative Law, this paper ...
American legal scholars spend a large proportion of their time debating and theorizing procedure. Th...
The law proceduralists write about and teach is nothing like what most ordinary Americans experience...
This interdisciplinary Article examines our federal court system from the perspective of the psychol...
This article surveys five approaches to justice in contemporary Anglo-American legal thought: pure p...
"Drawing on political, social and economic theory, this book focuses on the English civil justice sy...
This article provides a brief historical explanation of the role that juries have played in Anglo-Am...
This article asks whether the way in which procedure is taught has an impact on the extent and accom...
What difference does the teaching of civil procedure as an academic subject make to the practice of ...
In 1848, New York enacted a code of civil procedure that powerfully influenced the common law world....
the most vulnerable institution[s] " because of the public's "lack of appre-ciation f...
Much has been written about the origins of civil procedure. Yet little is known about the origins of...
This article reports on present and past efforts at civil justice reform in the United States and as...
In this dissertation, I explore the relationship between legal theory and legal practice. My focus i...
ABSTRACT. The United States is the home of judicialization or, perhaps more accurately in this case,...
Originally prepared for the 2007 meetings of the Italian Association of Comparative Law, this paper ...