Do-it-yourself tort reform: How the Supreme Court quietly killed the class...
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is written by David S. Schwartz, Professor of Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School. Professor Schwartz has taught at Wisconsin since...
View ArticleEliminating class actions – a tsunami in the wake of AT&T Mobility v....
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is written by Jean R. Sternlight, the Michael and Sonja Saltman Professor of Law as well as the Director of the Saltman Center for Conflict...
View ArticleClass actions in the wake of Concepcion
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is by Michael Rubin, a partner at Altshuler Berzon LLP in San Francisco. Mr. Rubin has practiced labor, employment, and appellate law since...
View ArticleThe uncertain future of the manifest disregarddoctrine
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is by John Elwood. Mr. Elwood is a partner at Vinson & Elkins in Washington, D.C., specializing in appellate litigation and administrative...
View ArticleRent-A-Center v. Jackson: Delegating to arbitrator power to determine...
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium comes from Steven C. Bennett, a partner at Jones Day in New York City whose practice focuses on domestic and international commercial litigation...
View ArticleThe third arbitration trilogy: Revelation, reaction and reflection on the...
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is by Thomas Stipanowich, the William H. Webster Chair and Professor of Law at Pepperdine and the Academic Director of the Straus Institute for...
View ArticleIs the Supreme Court demanding enough as it provides incentives for the...
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is by Nancy Welsh, Professor of Law at Penn State University, Dickinson School of Law. Her research and writing focus on negotiation,...
View ArticleA second, more circumstantial separability doctrine
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is by Thomas Carbonneau, the Orlando Distinguished Professor and Faculty Director Arbitration Institute, Penn State Law. Professor Carbonneau...
View ArticleAT&T Mobility and the end of consumer class action through Commerce Clause...
The following contribution to our arbitration symposium is written by Terry F. Moritz, a senior partner at Goldberg Kohn Ltd. in Chicago, Illinois. Mr. Moritz founded and chaired the firm’s...
View ArticleClosing thoughts on the arbitration symposium
It seems especially notable that despite the broad range of backgrounds of the contributors to this symposium, not a single author has even attempted to defend the reasoning or holding of Concepcion.Â...
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