Making state civil procedure

IF 2.5 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Z. Clopton
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

State courts matter. Not only do state courts handle more than sixty times the number of civil cases as federal courts, but they also represent an important bulwark against the effects of federal procedural retrenchment. Yet state courts and state procedure are notably absent from the scholarly discourse. In order to evaluate state procedure—and in order to understand the states’ relationship to federal procedural retrenchment—this Article presents the first comprehensive study of who makes state civil procedure. This project begins with a systematic review of the formal processes by which states make their rules of procedure. Many of the relevant sources were not publicly accessible, so this project not only collects important data but in so doing also makes state procedure more accessible. Formal rulemaking authority is only part of the story. At the federal level, scholars have focused on the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules: an elite committee of mostly judges and practitioners, selected by the Chief Justice, that plays a primary role in proposing amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Critics have argued that the advisory commit- tee favors corporate interests, and they have attributed these effects to committee membership. Since the 1960s, there has been a dramatic decline in the share of practitioners on the committee and, simultaneously, an increased homogeneity among its members—i.e., Republican judges and corporate defense attorneys. State advisory committees have gone virtually unstudied. Indeed, in many states, advisory committee membership is not readily accessible. I collected membership information for every state advisory committee, and this Article compares these little-studied state committees to the well-known federal committee. In brief, state committees are notably more diverse. They have far greater representation of practitioners than the federal committee, and those practitioners are more evenly divided between plaintiff- and defense-side lawyers and between individual and corporate lawyers. Partisan effects are less severe among state judge members than at the federal level. State committees have much greater female representation than the federal advisory committee, and at least equal representation of racial and ethnic minorities. But at the same time, many state committees are less accessible to the public than the federal committee is. This Article then makes at least three contributions. First, although these data do not support causal inference, they permit normative engagement with the design of rulemaking institutions. This analysis connects with interdisciplinary re- search on decision-making that suggests that epistemic diversity can produce better and more durable outputs. Second, I argue that civil rulemaking can unite accessibility and diversity. States can be more accessible, and federal rulemaking can be more diverse. Finally, as state procedure becomes more important, this Article helps ensure that relevant information is not limited to those with privileged access and the resources to use it.
制定国家民事程序
州法院很重要。州法院不仅处理的民事案件数量是联邦法院的60多倍,而且是抵御联邦程序紧缩影响的重要堡垒。然而,州法院和州诉讼程序显然没有出现在学术讨论中。为了评估州程序,并了解各州与联邦程序缩减的关系,本文首次对谁制定州民事程序进行了全面研究。该项目首先对各州制定议事规则的正式程序进行系统审查。许多相关来源都无法公开获取,因此该项目不仅收集了重要数据,而且还使国家程序更容易获取。正式的规则制定权威只是故事的一部分。在联邦层面,学者们关注的是民事规则咨询委员会:这是一个由首席大法官挑选的精英委员会,主要由法官和从业者组成,在提出《联邦民事诉讼规则》修正案方面发挥着主要作用。批评者认为,咨询承诺有利于企业利益,他们将这些影响归因于委员会成员。自20世纪60年代以来,委员会中从业者的比例急剧下降,与此同时,委员会成员(即共和党法官和公司辩护律师)的同质性也在增加。国家咨询委员会几乎没有经过研究。事实上,在许多州,咨询委员会的成员并不容易获得。我收集了每个州咨询委员会的成员信息,本文将这些研究较少的州委员会与著名的联邦委员会进行了比较。简言之,州委员会明显更加多样化。与联邦委员会相比,他们的从业者代表性要大得多,而且这些从业者在原告和辩方律师以及个人和公司律师之间的比例更为平均。州法官中的党派影响没有联邦法官那么严重。州委员会的女性代表人数比联邦咨询委员会多得多,至少少数种族和族裔的代表人数是平等的。但与此同时,许多州委员会比联邦委员会更不容易向公众开放。这篇文章至少做出了三项贡献。首先,尽管这些数据不支持因果推断,但它们允许规范参与规则制定机构的设计。这一分析与跨学科的决策研究相联系,表明认识多样性可以产生更好、更持久的产出。其次,我认为民事规则制定可以将可及性和多样性结合起来。各州可以更容易进入,联邦规则制定可以更多样。最后,随着国家程序变得越来越重要,本条有助于确保相关信息不限于那些有特权访问和使用这些信息的资源的人。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
4.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: Founded in 1915, the Cornell Law Review is a student-run and student-edited journal that strives to publish novel scholarship that will have an immediate and lasting impact on the legal community. The Cornell Law Review publishes six issues annually consisting of articles, essays, book reviews, and student notes.
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