[Introduction: the elements of procedure: are they separetely portable?]
Andreas F. Lowenfeld
págs. 649-655
Civil procedure reform in Italy
Vincenzo Varano
págs. 657-674
Civil procedure reform in comparative context: the United States of America
Stephen B. Burbank, Linda J. Silberman
págs. 675-704
Comment on Burbank and Silberman
William W. Schwarzer
págs. 705-708
Civil justice in the United Kingdom
Harry, Sir Woolf
págs. 709-736
Overview of the problems of French civil procedure
Daniel Soulez-Larivière
págs. 737-746
Comment on French civil procedure
Richard W. Hulbert
págs. 747-751
Civil procedure reform in Germany
Peter Gottwald
págs. 753-766
The 1996 Code of Civil Procedure of Japan: a procedure for the coming century?
Yasuhei Taniguchi
págs. 767-791
Reforming China's civil procedure: judging the courts
Jerome Alan Cohen
págs. 793-804
Per Henrik Lindblom
págs. 805-831
Some reflections on United States group actions
Jack B. Weinstein
págs. 833-837
The uncertain fate of evidentiary transplants: Anglo-American and continental experiments
Mirjan R. Damaska
págs. 839-852
Comments on Mirjan Damaska's of evidentiary transplants
Harry T. Edwards
págs. 853-859
págs. 861-870
Citizen discontent with legal procedures: a social science perspective on civil procedure reform
Tom R. Tyler
págs. 871-904
The legal-economic analysis of comparative civil procedure
Geoffrey P. Miller
págs. 905-918
Political integration and procedural convergence in the European Union
Konstantinos D. Kerameus
págs. 919-930
Some comments on European procedural harmonization
Friedrich K. Juenger
págs. 931-937