published articleConventional wisdom holds that federal jurisdiction is contracting and district court discretion is expanding. This Article argues that the conventional wisdom is wrong, and that the true doctrinal trends do not bode well for federal courts. The Supreme Court and the courts of appeals have begun to expand federal jurisdiction and contract judicial discretion, although few have noticed. The new jurisdictional trend is worrisome because the Court has not acknowledged - much less explained - its change of direction. As a result, the new rules are often unclear and inconsistent with existing precedent, leaving lower courts with little guidance. At the same time, the diminished discretion imposes its own costs. Reduced trial-cou...
This article begins with an analysis of the recent history of federal appellate court reform efforts...
article published in law reviewOne little-noticed side effect of the litigation explosion in this co...
A good deal of discussion, from a variety of vantage points, addresses the need to reform (a word ...
Conventional wisdom holds that federal jurisdiction is contracting and district court discretion is ...
Appellate jurisdiction in the federal system has been properly criticized for both its doctrinal inc...
The conversation about Supreme Court reform—as important as it is—has obscured another, equally impo...
This article examines the causes, nature, and potential demise of a federal judicial practice known ...
This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial pow...
That the Supreme Court of necessity largely leaves law development to the federal appellate courts, ...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
The recent litigation explosion presents a two-pronged dilemma for American appellate courts. If, on...
The ongoing debates over the legitimacy of judicial review-the power of courts to strike down uncons...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
Problems of appellate jurisdiction are, by their nature, mainly pragmatic problems. The U.S. Circuit...
Court-access doctrine in transnational litigation is plagued by uncertainty. Without a national cour...
This article begins with an analysis of the recent history of federal appellate court reform efforts...
article published in law reviewOne little-noticed side effect of the litigation explosion in this co...
A good deal of discussion, from a variety of vantage points, addresses the need to reform (a word ...
Conventional wisdom holds that federal jurisdiction is contracting and district court discretion is ...
Appellate jurisdiction in the federal system has been properly criticized for both its doctrinal inc...
The conversation about Supreme Court reform—as important as it is—has obscured another, equally impo...
This article examines the causes, nature, and potential demise of a federal judicial practice known ...
This Article examines growing congressional interest in a specific legislative check on judicial pow...
That the Supreme Court of necessity largely leaves law development to the federal appellate courts, ...
In recent decades, the paths from federal district courts to the federal circuit courts of appeals h...
The recent litigation explosion presents a two-pronged dilemma for American appellate courts. If, on...
The ongoing debates over the legitimacy of judicial review-the power of courts to strike down uncons...
According to a number of studies and commentators, a serious caseload crisis faces the federal court...
Problems of appellate jurisdiction are, by their nature, mainly pragmatic problems. The U.S. Circuit...
Court-access doctrine in transnational litigation is plagued by uncertainty. Without a national cour...
This article begins with an analysis of the recent history of federal appellate court reform efforts...
article published in law reviewOne little-noticed side effect of the litigation explosion in this co...
A good deal of discussion, from a variety of vantage points, addresses the need to reform (a word ...