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The Story Of A Class: Uses Of Narrative In Public Interest Class Actions Before Certification, Anne E. Ralph
The Story Of A Class: Uses Of Narrative In Public Interest Class Actions Before Certification, Anne E. Ralph
Washington Law Review
When litigants in public interest class actions tell their stories, the narratives can advance the law and influence public debate. But before class members’ stories can vindicate civil rights on the merits, plaintiffs must overcome the hurdle of class certification.
For decades, obtaining class certification under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 23 was not a significant challenge for plaintiffs seeking to litigate as a class. But recent restrictive procedural developments—including heightened standards for class certification—threaten the powerful stories that can be told through public interest class actions.
Missing in the critical analysis of class action jurisprudence is any discussion of …
When Congress Requires Nationwide Injunctions, David Hausman
When Congress Requires Nationwide Injunctions, David Hausman
University of Colorado Law Review
A curious provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) precludes class actions challenging expedited removal, the system of fast-track deportations for individuals who have recently entered the country. The same provision authorizes nationwide relief in non-class actions, but it requires that plaintiffs in such non-class systemic challenges file their claims in the federal District Court for the District of Columbia and that they do so within sixty days of the challenged change to the system. This framework should matter to scholars of nationwide injunctions for two reasons. First, Congress took for granted in 1996 that federal district courts may …