I\u27m in the most embarrassing, impossible situation for a commentator- namely, agreeing fundamentally with what the principal speaker said. In fact, I wrote an article against secret settlements in the GEORGETOWN LAW JOURNAL in 1995. If Monroe Freedman were here, he would explain to us that progress in ideas comes from contention and the testing of hypotheses by marshalling the strongest arguments against them. Since he\u27s not, I will nevertheless take that as my charge. Despite the fact that I agree with Richard on the ethical drawbacks of secret settlements, I\u27d like to begin by talking about what I think are the strongest arguments on behalf of secret settlements and against a sunshine-in-litigation regime
The current law governing public access to information generated through civil litigation is flawed ...
Lawyers frequently draft settlements that impede other parties\u27 access to relevant evidence throu...
Trade secret misappropriation litigation is often criticized for its negative effects on competition...
I\u27m in the most embarrassing, impossible situation for a commentator- namely, agreeing fundamenta...
This Comment will first address the different ways that parties are able to keep secret information ...
Even the most hotly contested lawsuits typically end in a confidential settlement forbidding the par...
Settlement is more likely if parties are free to set its terms, including a promise that these terms...
In this article, the authors argue that the use of secrecy agreements and practice restrictions in s...
This article is framed as a discussion of two proposals for modifying the Model Rules. One would dec...
Every year, federal and state courts put in place orders that regulate the prospective operations of...
In her article, Public Courts versus Private Justice: It\u27s Time to Let Some Sun Shine in on Alter...
The clash between privacy and public disclosure in dispute resolution demands the attention of legal...
I will discuss and respond to three potential concerns of creating confidentiality through contractu...
94 p.The conventional wisdom among practitioners and legal ethics scholars has been that lawyers ma...
Trade secret misappropriation litigation is often criticized for its negative effects on competition...
The current law governing public access to information generated through civil litigation is flawed ...
Lawyers frequently draft settlements that impede other parties\u27 access to relevant evidence throu...
Trade secret misappropriation litigation is often criticized for its negative effects on competition...
I\u27m in the most embarrassing, impossible situation for a commentator- namely, agreeing fundamenta...
This Comment will first address the different ways that parties are able to keep secret information ...
Even the most hotly contested lawsuits typically end in a confidential settlement forbidding the par...
Settlement is more likely if parties are free to set its terms, including a promise that these terms...
In this article, the authors argue that the use of secrecy agreements and practice restrictions in s...
This article is framed as a discussion of two proposals for modifying the Model Rules. One would dec...
Every year, federal and state courts put in place orders that regulate the prospective operations of...
In her article, Public Courts versus Private Justice: It\u27s Time to Let Some Sun Shine in on Alter...
The clash between privacy and public disclosure in dispute resolution demands the attention of legal...
I will discuss and respond to three potential concerns of creating confidentiality through contractu...
94 p.The conventional wisdom among practitioners and legal ethics scholars has been that lawyers ma...
Trade secret misappropriation litigation is often criticized for its negative effects on competition...
The current law governing public access to information generated through civil litigation is flawed ...
Lawyers frequently draft settlements that impede other parties\u27 access to relevant evidence throu...
Trade secret misappropriation litigation is often criticized for its negative effects on competition...