The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series of articles that ordinary choice of law problems are best understood through application of a particular conceptual framework, which I call the two-step model. Rather than thinking of choice of law as some sort of meta-procedure, this model takes it to address two substantive questions: what are the scope of the competing states’ laws, and which should be given priority if they conflict? My previous articles have explored the utility of this framework for tackling some perennial problems in choice of law. This one moves to a different context: choice of law in federal courts under the Erie doctrine. It argues that Erie is best understood as a ...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
For seventy-five years, Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing has provided a one-line answer to c...
For seventy-five years, Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing has provided a one-line answer to c...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
For seventy-five years, Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing has provided a one-line answer to c...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
The article offers a new perspective on choice of law in federal courts. I have argued in a series o...
For seventy-five years, Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing has provided a one-line answer to c...
For seventy-five years, Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing has provided a one-line answer to c...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
For seventy-five years, Klaxon v. Stentor Electric Manufacturing has provided a one-line answer to c...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
I have taught Civil Procedure for the past twenty-five years. Having returned to teaching Conflict o...
This Article seeks to mitigate decades of confusion about the Erie doctrine’s purposes, justificatio...
This contribution to a symposium marking the seventy-fifth anniversary of Erie Railroad Company v. T...