We do not have an Erie for the Age of Statutes. The Erie that we have addresses a world in which the common law dominated and in which federal courts could go ahout their daily work hy recourse to state-court-created doctrine,^ usually without creating federal common law. Those understandings do not fit an era in which federally made statutory law dominates the legal landscape and the primary role of federal courts is to interpret it. But the creation of federal common law remains discouraged, thanks to Erie\u27s continuing vitality and the durahility of the notion that Erie requires federal common law making to he limited and restricted. As a result, federal courts have spent the last century engaged in an under-the-radar enterpri...
In this Essay I explore what traditional Erie cases would look like if we treated those cases just l...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...
We do not have an Erie for the Age of Statutes. The Erie that we have addresses a world in which t...
The new frontlines in the statutory interpretation battles are the states. And the most interesting ...
The Erie doctrine requires federal courts sitting in diversity jurisdiction to apply state substan...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
Controversies about statutory interpretation and the proper roles for judges in interpretation are p...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
The Erie doctrine requires federal courts sitting in diversity jurisdiction to apply state substan...
From their first year in law school through their careers, attorneys have been mystified by the twis...
From their first year in law school through their careers, attorneys have been mystified by the twis...
There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition play...
There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition play...
In this Essay I explore what traditional Erie cases would look like if we treated those cases just l...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...
We do not have an Erie for the Age of Statutes. The Erie that we have addresses a world in which t...
The new frontlines in the statutory interpretation battles are the states. And the most interesting ...
The Erie doctrine requires federal courts sitting in diversity jurisdiction to apply state substan...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
Controversies about statutory interpretation and the proper roles for judges in interpretation are p...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
It is hard to find consensus on questions of statutory interpretation. Debates rage on about the app...
The Erie doctrine requires federal courts sitting in diversity jurisdiction to apply state substan...
From their first year in law school through their careers, attorneys have been mystified by the twis...
From their first year in law school through their careers, attorneys have been mystified by the twis...
There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition play...
There is wide agreement in American law and scholarship about the role the common law tradition play...
In this Essay I explore what traditional Erie cases would look like if we treated those cases just l...
The Supreme Court teaches that federal courts, unlike their counterparts in the states, are not gene...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...