In a world with multiple, overlapping jurisdictions, any given litigation could be pursued in more than one forum. Different laws can yield different outcomes. This leads to parties selecting a forum percieved as favorable to file suit. This practice, also known as forum shopping, has been much criticized, and various reforms to the law of conflicts of law have been proposed as a way to reduce this practice. The article examines the inefficiencies associated with forum selection, and the alleged shortcomings in conflicts law as it currently exists. We argue that forum selection cannot be eliminated in a world with multiple jurisdicions. Further, we argue that conflicts law has evolved, and continues to evolve, so that it tends toward co...
Forum selection is hardly new, but courts still disagree on the basics. What do these agreements rea...
This Article is the first comprehensive study of how American courts have resolved conflicts of laws...
Recent US court enforcement of foreign forum-selection clauses is durable only to the extent that th...
Forum shopping is often regarded as disreputable. It is argued that the phenomenon is rather the ine...
A game-theoretic analysis of forum shopping reveals how opportunities for strategic choices can infl...
This article discusses “forum shopping”—the act of seeking the most advantageous venue in which to t...
Accounts of forum shopping have failed to appreciate the role that federal-state competition for lit...
For many, "forum shopping" is a term with disparaging connotations, indicating something "evil". Tha...
International forum shopping in disputes on liability can be a legitimate procedural strategy for pl...
Forum shopping gets a bad name. This is even more true in the context of transnational litigation. T...
This Article uses empirical analysis to provide a new understanding of transnational litigation in U...
This Article uses empirical analysis to provide a new understanding of transnational litigation in U...
The law on choice of law in the various states and in the federal courts is a veritable jungle, wh...
This article posits that lack of discussion is a principal reason why the parameters of the forum se...
More than one thoughtful international business manager has been haunted by the fear that foreign ju...
Forum selection is hardly new, but courts still disagree on the basics. What do these agreements rea...
This Article is the first comprehensive study of how American courts have resolved conflicts of laws...
Recent US court enforcement of foreign forum-selection clauses is durable only to the extent that th...
Forum shopping is often regarded as disreputable. It is argued that the phenomenon is rather the ine...
A game-theoretic analysis of forum shopping reveals how opportunities for strategic choices can infl...
This article discusses “forum shopping”—the act of seeking the most advantageous venue in which to t...
Accounts of forum shopping have failed to appreciate the role that federal-state competition for lit...
For many, "forum shopping" is a term with disparaging connotations, indicating something "evil". Tha...
International forum shopping in disputes on liability can be a legitimate procedural strategy for pl...
Forum shopping gets a bad name. This is even more true in the context of transnational litigation. T...
This Article uses empirical analysis to provide a new understanding of transnational litigation in U...
This Article uses empirical analysis to provide a new understanding of transnational litigation in U...
The law on choice of law in the various states and in the federal courts is a veritable jungle, wh...
This article posits that lack of discussion is a principal reason why the parameters of the forum se...
More than one thoughtful international business manager has been haunted by the fear that foreign ju...
Forum selection is hardly new, but courts still disagree on the basics. What do these agreements rea...
This Article is the first comprehensive study of how American courts have resolved conflicts of laws...
Recent US court enforcement of foreign forum-selection clauses is durable only to the extent that th...