This Essay reviews Civil Litigation in Comparative Context (West 2007), by Oscar G. Chase, Helen Hershkoff, Linda Silberman, Yasuhei Taniguchi, Vincenzo Varano, and Adrian Zuckerman. It also identifies some areas of exceptionalist American civil procedure that recently have been converging towards global norms and argues that those convergences, if they continue, could render comparative studies particularly meaningful
The focus of the panel is the harmonization of differing civil procedure regimes in the transnationa...
For the past twenty years, the West German system of civil procedure has undergone extensive re-exam...
There is a large variety of legal and procedural systems. According to the classical point of view,...
Comparative civil procedure has had little influence in American jurisprudence and commentary, in pa...
The use of comparative law can enhance the teaching of American civil procedure, especially by a com...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Robert Casad\u27s articles on comparative civil procedure were among the first comparative law piece...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified“American exceptionalism” as a way t...
A Review of American Civil Procedure: An Introduction by Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr. and Michele Taruf...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
The James McCormick Mitchell Lecture, delivered at the University of Buffalo School of Law, November...
The state of publications on comparative procedure law is still deficient and, accordingly, an under...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...
The American judicial system will face significant challenges in the twenty-first century. One of it...
The focus of the panel is the harmonization of differing civil procedure regimes in the transnationa...
For the past twenty years, the West German system of civil procedure has undergone extensive re-exam...
There is a large variety of legal and procedural systems. According to the classical point of view,...
Comparative civil procedure has had little influence in American jurisprudence and commentary, in pa...
The use of comparative law can enhance the teaching of American civil procedure, especially by a com...
Comparative methodological and theoretical approaches are easily applicable to a deeper level unders...
Robert Casad\u27s articles on comparative civil procedure were among the first comparative law piece...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified“American exceptionalism” as a way t...
A Review of American Civil Procedure: An Introduction by Geoffrey C. Hazard, Jr. and Michele Taruf...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
Comparative law, especially the study of legal institutions and procedures, should be ranked among t...
The James McCormick Mitchell Lecture, delivered at the University of Buffalo School of Law, November...
The state of publications on comparative procedure law is still deficient and, accordingly, an under...
In this Article, Professor Silberman suggests that comparative law materials can usefully be introdu...
The American judicial system will face significant challenges in the twenty-first century. One of it...
The focus of the panel is the harmonization of differing civil procedure regimes in the transnationa...
For the past twenty years, the West German system of civil procedure has undergone extensive re-exam...
There is a large variety of legal and procedural systems. According to the classical point of view,...