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Jurisprudence Commons

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2008

Series

University of Connecticut

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Jurisprudence

Judicial Policy - Making And The Peculiar Function Of Law, Richard Kay Jan 2008

Judicial Policy - Making And The Peculiar Function Of Law, Richard Kay

Faculty Articles and Papers

While the nature of legal systems is a perpetually contested question, it is fairly uncontroversial that each must contain certain essential characteristics. First, each must suppose some picture of the appropriate way for human beings subject to it to live together in society. Second, to secure that proper arrangement, each must employ, to a greater or lesser degree, the device of general rules of conduct. Finally, in all but the simplest systems, the effectiveness of those rules must be guaranteed by some process of adjudication. The relationships among these three factors - social values, legal rules and judging - comprise …


Recovering The Social Value Of Jurisdictional Redundancy, Alexandra Lahav Jan 2008

Recovering The Social Value Of Jurisdictional Redundancy, Alexandra Lahav

Faculty Articles and Papers

This essay, written for the Tulane Law Review Symposium on the Problem of Multidistrict Litigation, argues that the focus of proceduralists on centralization as a solution to the problems posed by modern litigation is misplaced. It is time to refocus on the social value of the multiple centers of authority that jurisdictional redundancy permits. This essay presents the case for multi-centered litigation with particular focus on the potential uses of the Multidistrict Litigation Act to realize pluralist values. The descriptive claim put forward by the essay is that jurisdictional redundancy is imbedded in our federalist system and our preference for …