It is odd, therefore, to find Oscar Chase in the pages of this journal telling on the Americans what amounts to the Polish joke of comparative law. The Americans, he says, are so defectively endowed, so culturally impaired, that they cannot learn from the stunning success of other systems of civil justice. Chase\u27s essay is directed at (or more precisely, directed to evading the import of) an article that I published a decade ago, The German Advantage in Civil Procedure. Basing himself upon tired ethnic stereotypes about the individualism of Americans and the authoritarianism of Germans, Chase says that the disgraceful, truth-defeating excesses of adversary civil procedure in the United States deserve immunity from a critique that is base...
In the Summer 1978 issue of The Judges\u27 Journal, a pair of researchers published an article purpo...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
This (35 pp.) essay appears as a contribution to a law review symposium on the work of Harvard Law S...
This article will appear in a Symposium on comparative legal hermeneutics that includes four article...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
The conduct of civil litigation in Continental legal systems differs markedly from the Anglo-America...
Our lawyer-dominated system of civil procedure has often been criticized both for its incentives to ...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
As Judge Messitte\u27s essay demonstrates, recent references in Supreme Court decisions to non-U.S. ...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
The Article examines the comparative-impairment theory adopted by the California Supreme Court in Be...
Robert Casad\u27s articles on comparative civil procedure were among the first comparative law piece...
This Article asserts that during the twentieth century, American law has predominantly structured it...
This Essay reviews Civil Litigation in Comparative Context (West 2007), by Oscar G. Chase, Helen Her...
In the Summer 1978 issue of The Judges\u27 Journal, a pair of researchers published an article purpo...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
This (35 pp.) essay appears as a contribution to a law review symposium on the work of Harvard Law S...
This article will appear in a Symposium on comparative legal hermeneutics that includes four article...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
The conduct of civil litigation in Continental legal systems differs markedly from the Anglo-America...
Our lawyer-dominated system of civil procedure has often been criticized both for its incentives to ...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
As Judge Messitte\u27s essay demonstrates, recent references in Supreme Court decisions to non-U.S. ...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Few would dispute that law and legal procedures lie at the core of American self-identity and are wo...
The Article examines the comparative-impairment theory adopted by the California Supreme Court in Be...
Robert Casad\u27s articles on comparative civil procedure were among the first comparative law piece...
This Article asserts that during the twentieth century, American law has predominantly structured it...
This Essay reviews Civil Litigation in Comparative Context (West 2007), by Oscar G. Chase, Helen Her...
In the Summer 1978 issue of The Judges\u27 Journal, a pair of researchers published an article purpo...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
This (35 pp.) essay appears as a contribution to a law review symposium on the work of Harvard Law S...