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Full-Text Articles in Law
Justice For Profit: A Comparative Analysis Of Australian, Canadian And U.S. Third Party Litigation Funding, Jasminka Kalajdzic, Peter Cashman, Alana M. Longmoore
Justice For Profit: A Comparative Analysis Of Australian, Canadian And U.S. Third Party Litigation Funding, Jasminka Kalajdzic, Peter Cashman, Alana M. Longmoore
Jasminka Kalajdzic
Third party litigation funding (TPLF) has emerged as one of the most important developments in civil litigation. Courts and policymakers in several countries are looking to each other as they debate the costs and benefits of this growing industry, and the need for regulatory oversight. Such cross-pollination in the public and jurisprudential debates on TPLF can be enormously helpful, but must be approached with caution. The TPLF industry operates in very different procedural environments, and any comparative analysis must take into account the various jurisdictions’ unique litigation culture and architecture. In this paper, the authors explore TPLF in the U.S., …
Evaluating And Improving The Mdl Process, Francis Mcgovern, John G. Heyburn
Evaluating And Improving The Mdl Process, Francis Mcgovern, John G. Heyburn
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Structural Role Of Private Enforcement Mechanisms In Public Law, J. Maria Glover
The Structural Role Of Private Enforcement Mechanisms In Public Law, J. Maria Glover
Georgetown Law Faculty Publications and Other Works
The American regulatory system is unique in that it expressly relies upon a diffuse set of regulators, including private parties, rather than upon a centralized bureaucracy, for the effectuation of its substantive aims. In contrast with more traditional conceptions of private enforcement as an ad hoc supplement to public law, this Article argues that private regulation through litigation is an integral part of the structure of the modern regulatory state. Private litigation and the mechanisms that enable it are not merely add-ons to our regulatory regime, much less are they fundamentally at odds with it.
Yet mechanisms of enforcement attendant …