This Article proposes reforms to bankruptcy law’s venue rules. These reforms would expand venue choice, reduce opportunistic venue shopping, and account for the rise of global forum shopping. To date, the leading proposals to reform venue selection rules for bankruptcy cases have ignored simpler alternatives that can reduce opportunistic misbehavior while preserving beneficial choice. Moreover, those proposals have focused exclusively on restricting a debtor’s choice among venues within the United States while ignoring the increasing availability and convenience of foreign courts as forums for distressed corporate debtors seeking to initiate insolvency proceedings. In this way, the proposals on the table run the risk of failing at their pri...
This Article begins with a brief description of international bankruptcy forum shopping. This initia...
(Excerpt) In general, Chapter 15 of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) provi...
In the United States, relations between debtors and their creditors are governed by two distinct leg...
In 1978, changes to the venue rules for bankruptcy cases created surprisingly permissive venue selec...
An empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of the forty-three largest, publicly held compan...
For almost two decades, an embarrassing pattern of forum shopping has been developing in the highly ...
Companies routinely file bankruptcy cases in venues that have no meaningful connection to the compan...
The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on several of the nation’s industries, aviation being no str...
Most commentators decry forum shopping. This general hostility extends to forum shopping by firms fi...
Over the past 30 years, the majority of large firms that filed for bankruptcy did so in the US bankr...
(Excerpt) The strong policy in favor of centralizing bankruptcy disputes in a single forum often ove...
We analyze a sample of large Chapter 11 cases to determine which factors motivate the choice of fili...
The first draft of this article was presented at the 1st Joint Symposium between Seoul National Univ...
(Exceprt) When pursuing a case under Chapter 15 of Title 11 in the United States, Code (the “Bankrup...
In the last fifteen years or so, lawyers working in law and economics and economists with an interes...
This Article begins with a brief description of international bankruptcy forum shopping. This initia...
(Excerpt) In general, Chapter 15 of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) provi...
In the United States, relations between debtors and their creditors are governed by two distinct leg...
In 1978, changes to the venue rules for bankruptcy cases created surprisingly permissive venue selec...
An empirical study of the bankruptcy reorganization of the forty-three largest, publicly held compan...
For almost two decades, an embarrassing pattern of forum shopping has been developing in the highly ...
Companies routinely file bankruptcy cases in venues that have no meaningful connection to the compan...
The COVID-19 pandemic has wreaked havoc on several of the nation’s industries, aviation being no str...
Most commentators decry forum shopping. This general hostility extends to forum shopping by firms fi...
Over the past 30 years, the majority of large firms that filed for bankruptcy did so in the US bankr...
(Excerpt) The strong policy in favor of centralizing bankruptcy disputes in a single forum often ove...
We analyze a sample of large Chapter 11 cases to determine which factors motivate the choice of fili...
The first draft of this article was presented at the 1st Joint Symposium between Seoul National Univ...
(Exceprt) When pursuing a case under Chapter 15 of Title 11 in the United States, Code (the “Bankrup...
In the last fifteen years or so, lawyers working in law and economics and economists with an interes...
This Article begins with a brief description of international bankruptcy forum shopping. This initia...
(Excerpt) In general, Chapter 15 of title 11 of the United States Code (the “Bankruptcy Code”) provi...
In the United States, relations between debtors and their creditors are governed by two distinct leg...