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Wholesale Justice: Constitutional Democracy and the Problem of the Class Action Lawsuit - Paperback

Stanford Law Books
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9780804752756
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ISBN13:
9780804752756
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In recent years, much political and legal debate has centered on the class action lawsuit. Many lawyers and judges have noted the intense pressure to settle caused by the very filing of a suit. Some contend that the procedure amounts to a form of judicial blackmail. Others counter that it is an effective means of policing corporate behavior and assuring injured victims' fair compensation. This book represents the first scholarly effort to view the modern class action comprehensively through the lenses of American political and constitutional theory. Redish argues that the modern class action undermines foundational constitutional principles, including procedural due process and separation of powers, and has been improperly transformed from its origins as a complex procedural device into a means for altering controlling substantive law in highly undemocratic ways. Redish proposes an alternative vision of the class action lawsuit, one that is designed to enable the device to serve its valuable procedural purposes without simultaneously contravening core precepts of American constitutional democracy.


  • | Author: Martin H. Redish
  • | Publisher: Stanford Law Books
  • | Publication Date: Apr 20, 2009
  • | Number of Pages: 328 pages
  • | Binding: Paperback or Softback
  • | ISBN-10: 0804752753
  • | ISBN-13: 9780804752756
Author:
Martin H. Redish
Publisher:
Stanford Law Books
Publication Date:
Apr 20, 2009
Number of pages:
328 pages
Binding:
Paperback or Softback
ISBN-10:
0804752753
ISBN-13:
9780804752756