Robert Casad\u27s articles on comparative civil procedure were among the first comparative law pieces that caught my eye when, as a freshly-minted associate at a leading New York law firm, I found myself leafing through comparative law journals, rather than amassing billable hours. I had no idea then that comparative law could be as fascinating as I have come to find it, certainly not in a field like civil procedure where the dividends of comparative law work were by no means obvious to me. (Comparative law was not even taught in any guise at Yale Law School in the late 1960\u27s and early 70\u27s, and international law as taught there frankly resonated poorly with matters of civil procedure.) Doing comparative law work back then struck me ...
As experiments with class actions spread to more distant shores, especially in countries of civil la...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...
This Essay reviews Civil Litigation in Comparative Context (West 2007), by Oscar G. Chase, Helen Her...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
The use of comparative law can enhance the teaching of American civil procedure, especially by a com...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified“American exceptionalism” as a way t...
The state of publications on comparative procedure law is still deficient and, accordingly, an under...
Comparative civil procedure has had little influence in American jurisprudence and commentary, in pa...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
This piece discusses the tension between internationalization of legal ordering and the growing pres...
Problems of commercial law are apt to be similar or at least comparable in all commercial countries,...
In the course of this conference on new approaches to comparative law; it has struck me as curious...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
As experiments with class actions spread to more distant shores, especially in countries of civil la...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...
This Essay reviews Civil Litigation in Comparative Context (West 2007), by Oscar G. Chase, Helen Her...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
The use of comparative law can enhance the teaching of American civil procedure, especially by a com...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified“American exceptionalism” as a way t...
The state of publications on comparative procedure law is still deficient and, accordingly, an under...
Comparative civil procedure has had little influence in American jurisprudence and commentary, in pa...
Despite its historic presence in American law, comparative law was, until recently, largely the pres...
This piece discusses the tension between internationalization of legal ordering and the growing pres...
Problems of commercial law are apt to be similar or at least comparable in all commercial countries,...
In the course of this conference on new approaches to comparative law; it has struck me as curious...
The use and study of comparative law has grown in scope and in importance—and no more so than in the...
As experiments with class actions spread to more distant shores, especially in countries of civil la...
Address the problem of comparative law in the United States. Explains why comparative law matters. G...
An aura of malaise hangs over the field of Comparative Law\u27- sometimes alluded to as the drama...