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University of Pennsylvania Carey Law School

2008

Litigation

Complex litigation

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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Class Action Fairness Act Of 2005 In Historical Context: A Preliminary View, Stephen B. Burbank Jun 2008

The Class Action Fairness Act Of 2005 In Historical Context: A Preliminary View, Stephen B. Burbank

All Faculty Scholarship

As courts confront, and commentators begin to write about, the many jurisdictional questions that emerged from CAFA’s long and messy legislative process, I propose instead to set that legislation in context. The contexts that, given my training and interests, I find most revealing concern the history of federal diversity of citizenship litigation in general and, within that larger story, the history of diversity class actions in federal court. Because all questions of federal court subject matter jurisdiction implicate the "happy relations of States to Nation," both accounts necessarily pay attention to state court litigation and to the impact of doctrinal …


The Complexity Of Modern American Civil Litigation: Curse Or Cure?, Stephen B. Burbank Jan 2008

The Complexity Of Modern American Civil Litigation: Curse Or Cure?, Stephen B. Burbank

All Faculty Scholarship

Originally prepared for the 2007 meetings of the Italian Association of Comparative Law, this paper seeks to excavate the roots of procedural complexity in modern American litigation. Proceeding from the view that there is no accepted definition of complex litigation in the United States, the paper discusses five related phenomena that the author regards as consequential: (1) the architecture of modern American lawsuits and the procedural philosophy that architecture reflects, (2) the volume of litigation and the public and private policies, attitudes and arrangements that affect it, (3) the dynamic nature of, and dispersed institutional responsibility for, American law, (4) …