173 research outputs found

    The Procedural Foundation of Substantive Law

    Get PDF
    The substance-procedure dichotomy is a popular target of scholarly criticism because procedural law is inherently substantive. This article argues that substantive law is also inherently procedural. I suggest that the construction of substantive law entails assumptions about the procedures that will apply when that substantive law is ultimately enforced. Those procedures are embedded in the substantive law and, if not applied, will lead to over- or under-enforcement of the substantive mandate. Yet the substance-procedure dichotomy encourages us to treat procedural systems as essentially fungible-leading to a problem of mismatches between substantive law and unanticipated procedures. I locate this argument about the procedural foundation of substantive law within a broader discussion of the origin and status of the substanceprocedure dichotomy

    An Overwhelming Question About Non-Formal Procedure

    Full text link

    Our Passive-Aggressive Model of Civil Adjudication

    Get PDF
    In this essay, Professor Main offers one original observation and poses two new questions about the vanishing civil trial

    Harmonization of Procedure: Theory and Practice

    Full text link
    Review of Kramer & Rhee, Civil Litigation in a Globalizing World (2012)

    Procedural Uniformity and the Exagerated Role of Rules

    Full text link

    Procedural Constants: How Delay Aversion Shapes Reform

    Full text link

    Uniformity of State & Federal Procedure

    Full text link
    corecore