Search for: "Nora Engstrom" Results 81 - 100 of 127
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2 May 2018, 3:30 am by Nora Freeman Engstrom
Nora Freeman Engstrom In Access to Justice: Looking Back, Thinking Ahead, Deborah L. [read post]
21 Jun 2023, 3:30 am by Nora Freeman Engstrom
Nora Freeman Engstrom In The Civil Jury: Reviving an American Institution, authors Richard L. [read post]
30 Mar 2020, 3:30 am by Nora Freeman Engstrom
Nora Freeman Engstrom In The Curious Incident of the Falling Win Rate, Alexandra Lahav and Peter Siegelman highlight a remarkable—but heretofore overlooked—fact: Between 1985 and 1995, the plaintiff win rate in adjudicated civil cases in federal courts fell precipitously, from 70 percent to 30 percent. [read post]
31 Oct 2022, 12:00 pm by Nora Freeman Engstrom
Nora Freeman Engstrom In Judges and the Deregulation of the Lawyer’s Monopoly, co-authors Jessica K. [read post]
12 Apr 2017, 3:30 am by Nora Freeman Engstrom
Nora Freeman Engstrom David Engel’s recent book, The Myth of the Litigious Society, has its roots in a piece published over two decades ago, by UCLA’s Richard Abel. [read post]
24 May 2019, 3:30 am by Nora Freeman Engstrom
Nora Freeman Engstrom Allen Kachalia and ten co-authors’ new piece, entitled Effects of a Communication-and-Resolution Program on Hospitals’ Malpractice Claims and Costs, offers an insight to address one of the most daunting challenges that looms over the field of tort law—and, indeed, one of the most daunting challenges that confronts the “sister professions” of law and medicine more generally. [read post]
16 Dec 2009, 9:14 pm
"Run-of-the-Mill Justice" by Stanford Law professor Nora Freeman Engstrom, published in a recent issue of Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics, analyzes the practices of "settlement mill" law firms -- those that "advertise aggressively, sign a higher percentage of callers to contract, delegate more duties to non-lawyers, file fewer lawsuits, and take far fewer cases to trial" than legitimate law firms and attorneys. [read post]
16 Dec 2009, 9:14 pm
"Run-of-the-Mill Justice" by Stanford Law professor Nora Freeman Engstrom, published in a recent issue of Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics, analyzes the practices of "settlement mill" law firms -- those that "advertise aggressively, sign a higher percentage of callers to contract, delegate more duties to non-lawyers, file fewer lawsuits, and take far fewer cases to trial" than legitimate law firms and attorneys. [read post]
14 Oct 2019, 2:58 pm by Nora Freeman Engstrom, Diana Garnet Li
Here, Stanford Law Professor Nora Freeman Engstrom, a tort law and complex litigation expert, and Diana Garnet Li, a student in the Stanford Law School Class of 2021, discuss the mounting product liability exposure facing the multinational giant—and how these cases may develop. [read post]
22 Apr 2016, 3:30 am by Nora Engstrom
Nora Engstrom Margaret Jane Radin’s latest work, Boilerplate: The Fine Print, Vanishing Rights, and the Rule of Law and a companion article and book chapter interrogate how now-ubiquitous fine print buried deep in consumer contracts affects the rights of ordinary Americans. [read post]
(Originally published by Bloomberg Law on May 18, 2023) The US should reform UPL laws to broaden access to legal help, which can include responsible use of AI, say Stanford Law School’s Nora Freeman Engstrom and David Freeman Engstrom. [read post]
6 Jan 2021, 3:30 am by Linda S. Mullenix
Russell anchors his discussion in Nora Freeman Engstrom’s scholarship on “settlement mills. [read post]
28 Feb 2019, 12:02 am by karen shephard
Brooklyn Law School – Nora Engstrom, Professor of Law and Deane F. [read post]
23 Oct 2013, 9:05 pm by Walter Olson
Call: 717-671-1901 [promotion for Commonwealth Foundation, a Pennsylvania free-market-oriented outfit] How litigation finance might remake the lawsuit landscape [Nora Freeman Engstrom via TortsProf] Tweet Tags: asbestos, Japan, product liability, Stella LiebeckLiability and torts roundup is a post from Overlawyered - Chronicling the high cost of our legal system [read post]
6 Dec 2010, 4:09 am by Ted Frank
The Nora Freeman Engstrom article that Fisher discusses details the cases of two separate Louisiana law firms whose lawyers were disbarred for their cookie-cutter operations—because they used a legal assistant to do the negotiating or paid kickbacks to runners, rather than because of their shoddy representation. [read post]
20 Jan 2014, 8:05 pm by Walter Olson
[Nora Freeman Engstrom, SSRN] “Philadelphia Becomes First City To Ban 3D-Printed Gun Manufacturing” [Zenon Evans] Once again on the vacuous but oft-repeated “NRA is a front for gunmakers” line [Tuccille] Tweet Tags: asbestos, autos, guns, Pennsylvania, pharmaceuticals, Philadelphia, product liability, tobacco settlementProduct liability roundup is a post from Overlawyered - Chronicling the high cost of our legal system [read post]