Fifty Years of Class Actions – A Global Perspective
Theoretical Inquiries in Law has just published a symposium volume on FiftyYears of Class Actions – A Global Perspective.
It’s chock full of interesting ideas and features a keynote from Professor Arthur Miller (NYU). Here’s the table of contents (if the PDF links below don’t work, the full volume is available at the link above):
| Yael Braudo, TIL Editorial Board |
| Keynote Address – The American Class Action: From Birth to Maturity | |
| Arthur R. Miller |
| Publicly Funded Objectors | |
| Elizabeth Chamblee Burch |
| Tiered Certification | |
| Shay Lavie |
| Can and Should the New Third-Party Litigation Financing Come to Class Actions? | |
| Brian T. Fitzpatrick |
| The Global Class Action and Its Alternatives | |
| Zachary D. Clopton |
| Class Actions in the United States and Israel: A Comparative Approach | |
| Alon Klement, Robert Klonoff |
| Regulation Through Litigation — Collective Redress in Need of a New Balance Between Individual Rights and Regulatory Objectives in Europe | |
| Brigitte Haar |
| Towards Collaborative Governance of European Remedial and Procedural Law? | |
| Fabrizio Cafaggi |
| Class Action Value | |
| Catherine Piché |
| When Pragmatism Leads to Unintended Consequences: A Critique of Australia’s Unique Closed Class Regime | |
| Vicki Waye, Vince Morabito |
| Rethinking the Relationship Between Public Regulation and Private Litigation: Evidence from Securities Class Action in China | |
| Robin Hui Huang |
| The Regime Politics Origins of Class Action Regulation | |
| Agustín Barroilhet |
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