The first book to comprehensively analyze, critique, and provide solutions for the new pleading regime in U.S. federal courts. In two recent recent decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court dramatically altered the pleadings landscape by imposing a new version of fact pleading and merits screening - what Scott Dodson calls \u27New Pleading.\u27 The result of this abrupt regime change is a broad, significant, and adverse effect on the civil-justice system. But because of its nascence, no scholar has provided a comprehensive, doctrinal, theoretical, and prospective look at what it means for U.S. federal civil procedure, both at home and in the larger global community. This book takes on that task. It aims to synthesize a theoretical account of New Pl...
This Article provides a foundational structural analysis underlying the federal procedural system an...
The recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were the most controversial in decades...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified “American exceptionalism” as a way ...
The first book to comprehensively analyze, critique, and provide solutions for the new pleading regi...
The U.S. Supreme Court revolutionized the law on pleading by its suggestive Bell Atlantic Corp. v....
Pleading in federal court has a new narrative. The old narrative was one of notice, with the goal of...
Federal pleading standards are in crisis The Supreme Courts recent decisions in Bell Atlantic Corp v...
This chapter looks at the U.S. Supreme Court’s adoption of a radical new pleading standard as an exa...
Where does pleading doctrine, at the federal level, stand today? The Supreme Court\u27s revision of ...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were promulgated in 1938 to provide the “just, speedy, and inex...
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal are the most important cases on pleading in fif...
Ashcroft v. Iqbal and its predecessor, Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, introduced a change to federa...
Comparative civil procedure has had little influence in American jurisprudence and commentary, in pa...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
In Conley v. Gibson, the Supreme Court announced its commitment to a liberal pleading regime in fede...
This Article provides a foundational structural analysis underlying the federal procedural system an...
The recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were the most controversial in decades...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified “American exceptionalism” as a way ...
The first book to comprehensively analyze, critique, and provide solutions for the new pleading regi...
The U.S. Supreme Court revolutionized the law on pleading by its suggestive Bell Atlantic Corp. v....
Pleading in federal court has a new narrative. The old narrative was one of notice, with the goal of...
Federal pleading standards are in crisis The Supreme Courts recent decisions in Bell Atlantic Corp v...
This chapter looks at the U.S. Supreme Court’s adoption of a radical new pleading standard as an exa...
Where does pleading doctrine, at the federal level, stand today? The Supreme Court\u27s revision of ...
The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were promulgated in 1938 to provide the “just, speedy, and inex...
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly and Ashcroft v. Iqbal are the most important cases on pleading in fif...
Ashcroft v. Iqbal and its predecessor, Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, introduced a change to federa...
Comparative civil procedure has had little influence in American jurisprudence and commentary, in pa...
Though they originated as an insubstantial entity, United States Federal Courts have become a virtua...
In Conley v. Gibson, the Supreme Court announced its commitment to a liberal pleading regime in fede...
This Article provides a foundational structural analysis underlying the federal procedural system an...
The recent amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were the most controversial in decades...
Recent scholarship in comparative civil procedure has identified “American exceptionalism” as a way ...