| Vol. 78 |
December 2009 |
No. 3 |
| |
|
|
SYMPOSIUM
AGAINST SETTLEMENT: TWENTY-FIVE YEARS LATER
FOREWORD: REFLECTIONS ON THE ADJUDICATION-SETTLEMENT DIVIDE Howard M. Erichson
SOME THOUGHTS ABOUT THE ECONOMICS OF SETTLEMENT John Bronsteen
REVISITING AGAINST SETTLEMENT: SOME REFLECTIONS ON DISPUTE RESOLUTION AND PUBLIC VALUES Amy J. Cohen
REEXAMINING THE ARGUMENTS IN OWEN M. FISS, AGAINST SETTLEMENT Kenneth R. Feinberg
THE PUBLIC VALUE OF SETTLEMENT Samuel Issacharoff & Robert H. Klonoff
THREE THINGS TO BE AGAINST (“SETTLEMENT” NOT INCLUDED) Michael Moffitt
MEDIATION EXCEPTIONALITY Jacqueline Nolan-Haley
COMMENTS ON OWEN M. FISS, AGAINST SETTLEMENT (1984) Hon. Jack B. Weinstein
THE HISTORY OF AN IDEA Owen M. Fiss
ARTICLE
WHAT OWNERS WANT AND GOVERNMENTS DO: EVIDENCE FROM THE OREGON EXPERIMENT Bethany R. Berger
NOTES
LOVE THY NEIGHBOR: SHOULD RELIGIOUS ACCOMMODATIONS THAT NEGATIVELY AFFECT COWORKERS’ SHIFT PREFERENCES CONSTITUTE AN UNDUE HARDSHIP ON THE EMPLOYER UNDER TITLE VII? Rachel M. Birnbach
THE RIGHTS OF DIVORCED LESBIANS: INTERSTATE RECOGNITION OF CHILD CUSTODY JUDGMENTS IN THE CONTEXT OF SAME-SEX DIVORCE Kathryn J. Harvey
SECURITIES CLASS ACTIONS, CAFA, AND A COUNTRYWIDE CRISIS: A CALL FOR CLARITY AND CONSISTENCY Denise Mazzeo
THE ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE AND INFORMATION DISCLOSED TO AN ATTORNEY WITH THE INTENTION THAT THE ATTORNEY DRAFT A DOCUMENT TO BE RELEASED TO THIRD PARTIES: PUBLIC POLICY CALLS FOR AT LEAST THE STRICTEST APPLICATION OF THE ATTORNEY-CLIENT PRIVILEGE Daniel Northrop
TOWARD EFFECTIVE IMPLEMENTATION OF 11 U.S.C. § 522(d)(11)(E): INVIGORATING A POWERFUL BANKRUPTCY EXEMPTION Uriel Rabinovitz
WHEN COWS FLY: EXPANDING COGNIZABLE INJURY-IN-FACT AND INTEREST GROUP LITIGATION Robert Terenzi, Jr.
|