Recovery for economic loss following the Exxon "valdez" oil spill
Victor P. Goldberg
págs. 1-39
Multidefendant settlements: The impact of joint and several liability
Lewis A. Kornhauser, Richard L. Revesz
págs. 41-76
Bad faith refusal to settle by liability insurers: Some implications of the judgment-proof problem
Alan O. Sykes
págs. 77-108
Should we abolish chapter 11? the evidence from japan
Shoichi Tagashira, Theodore Eisenberg
págs. 111-157
Judicial competence and the interpretation of incomplete contracts
Gillian K. Hadfield
págs. 159-184
The courts and the plaintiff bar: awarding the attorney fee in class-action litigation
William J. Lynk
págs. 185-209
Do contingent fees promote excessive litigation?
Thomas J. Miceli
págs. 211-224
Improving settlement devices: Rule 68 and beyond
David A. Anderson
págs. 225-246
The economic underpinnings of patent law
Kenneth W. Dam
págs. 247-271
Risk-adjusted valuation of professional degrees in divorce
Martin Zelder, Daniel D. Polsby
págs. 273-285
págs. 287-301
Introduction: Economic analysis of civil procedure
Geoffrey P. Miller
págs. 303-306
págs. 307-401
Neoactuarialism: comment on Kaplow (1)
Daniel R. Ortiz
págs. 403-409
Valuing accuracy--filling out the framework: Comment on kaplow (2)
Stephen McG. Bundy
págs. 411-433
An economic model of legal discovery
Robert Cooter, Daniel L. Rubinfeld
págs. 435-463
Discovery cost allocation: Comment on cooter and rubinfeld
Edward H. Cooper
págs. 465-480
Civil discovery: its effects and optimal scope
Bruce L. Hay
págs. 481-515
Multidefendant settlements under joint and several liability: The problem of insolvency
Richard L. Revesz, Lewis A. Kornhauser
págs. 517-542
The effect of joint and several liability on the settlement rate--mathematical symmetries and metaissues about rational litigant behavior: comment on kornhauser and revesz
John J., III Donohue
págs. 543-558
A note on joint and several liability: Insolvency, settlement, and incentives
Kathryn E. Spier
págs. 559-568
Avoiding surprise from federal civil rule making: The role of economic analysis
Laurens Walker
págs. 569-593
The empirical turn in procedural rule making: Comment on Walker (1)
Robert G. Bone
págs. 595-613
Repealing the law of unintended consequences?: Comment on walker (2)
Thomas D. Rowe Jr.
págs. 615-626
Judicial preferences, public choice, and the rules of procedure
Jonathan R. Macey
págs. 627-646
Judges' self-interest and procedural rules: comment on Macey
Janet Cooper Alexander
págs. 647-665



