This article reports on present and past efforts at civil justice reform in the United States and assesses the opportunities for learning from Continental models. European jurists have long urged that their American colleagues consider using continental approaches in dealing with the serious problems that afflict the American system of civil justice. A few years back, our colleague Kötz noted that If there is a desire to reform American civil procedure, either by making changes within the adversary system or by developing alternative methods of dispute resolution, the Continental experience may be well worth studying
Events in Europe are impelling Americans to give European civil law systems more attention. While co...
The essay aims to explore the backgrounds of the positive response, and to some extent, to move towa...
Civil justice in the US is a primary means of law enforcement, and those who compete in the US econo...
This article reports on present and past efforts at civil justice reform in the United States and as...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
In the 1970s and early 1980s, legal academics hotly debated the possibility of basing American law r...
Professor Kötz delivered the inaugural Herbert L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture in Comparative Law in 2...
American civil justice fails to meet the nation\u27s needs. America\u27s eighteenth century founders...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified “American exceptionalism” as a way ...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Contrary to its public rhetoric promising “justice for all” and “equal justice under law,” access to...
American legal scholars spend a large proportion of their time debating and theorizing procedure. Th...
Our lawyer-dominated system of civil procedure has often been criticized both for its incentives to ...
In 1776, when Americans declared independence from Britain, they also declared their rights. Their d...
This Article argues that crime in the United States has reached socially unacceptable proportions an...
Events in Europe are impelling Americans to give European civil law systems more attention. While co...
The essay aims to explore the backgrounds of the positive response, and to some extent, to move towa...
Civil justice in the US is a primary means of law enforcement, and those who compete in the US econo...
This article reports on present and past efforts at civil justice reform in the United States and as...
Discusses the lack of American interest in learning about foreign civil procedure. Considers points ...
In the 1970s and early 1980s, legal academics hotly debated the possibility of basing American law r...
Professor Kötz delivered the inaugural Herbert L. Bernstein Memorial Lecture in Comparative Law in 2...
American civil justice fails to meet the nation\u27s needs. America\u27s eighteenth century founders...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified “American exceptionalism” as a way ...
In a recent issue of this Journal, Professor Abraham Goldstein and Research Fellow Martin Marcus dis...
Contrary to its public rhetoric promising “justice for all” and “equal justice under law,” access to...
American legal scholars spend a large proportion of their time debating and theorizing procedure. Th...
Our lawyer-dominated system of civil procedure has often been criticized both for its incentives to ...
In 1776, when Americans declared independence from Britain, they also declared their rights. Their d...
This Article argues that crime in the United States has reached socially unacceptable proportions an...
Events in Europe are impelling Americans to give European civil law systems more attention. While co...
The essay aims to explore the backgrounds of the positive response, and to some extent, to move towa...
Civil justice in the US is a primary means of law enforcement, and those who compete in the US econo...