Private Law Theory Meets Civil Procedure Colloquium

PrivateLawTheoryMeetsCivProColloquiumFeb142025WarrenRoomBerkeleyLaw

About the Colloquium

Civil procedure has long been considered an adjunct to the substantive law – in the words of Charles E. Clark, former Yale Law School dean, Second Circuit judge, and primary drafter of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the “handmaid to justice.” In Clark’s view – along with other prominent contemporaries like Karl Llewellyn and Roscoe Pound – procedure’s proper place is “subordinate . . . to the ends of substantive justice.” In a very general way, this is of course true; procedure should support and not inhibit the ends of the substantive law. But in recent years scholars have come to understand that procedure is not simply “adjective law,” but is a source of power and value. As such, procedure itself demands the same theoretical attention as other areas of law, distinct from the substantive law in cases that are being litigated. Although procedure straddles the line between “public” and “private” law, and much attention has been focused on the “public law” aspects of the procedural canon in areas like jurisdiction and the Erie doctrine, the organizing idea of this colloquium is that private-law theory has much to offer in the study of procedure, and vice versa. How procedure has adapted over time – and the necessary tradeoffs in procedure that scarce resources require – may offer a lens into how and why private law has developed or should develop.

This colloquium seeks to bring together scholars who study procedure – including mass, or aggregate, litigation – with scholars who focus on private-law theory. One of our main questions will be how the development of procedure as a field with its own rich, normative foundations aligns with (or maybe challenges) deeply rooted principles of contract and tort theory.

Program 

We will divide our day-long conversation into four sessions. Each participant will have 5 minutes to explain what their chosen paper contributes to our thinking about the relationships between private law theory and legal procedure, followed by 35 minutes of discussion focused on that paper. We assume everyone will have read every paper, and the job of the panel chair is simply to keep time and moderate the discussion.

Agenda

Welcome and Continental Breakfast                                                                   9:00 – 9:30 a.m.

Hanoch Dagan, Founding Director, Berkeley Center for Private Law Theory, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law

Prof. Andrew Bradt, Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley, School of Law

PANEL I – Panel Title                                                                                            9:30 – 11:15 a.m.

Presenter 1 – Paper Title

Presenter 2 – Paper Title

Presenter 3 – Paper Title

Moderator: 

Coffee Break                                                                                                          11:15 – 11:30 a.m.

PANEL II – Panel Title                                                                                           11:30 – 1:15 p.m.

Presenter 1 – Paper Title

Presenter 2 – Paper Title

Presenter 3 – Paper Title

Moderator: 

Lunch in the Warren Room                                                                                   1:15 – 2:30 p.m.

PANEL III – Panel Title                                                                                          2:30 – 4:15 p.m.

Presenter 1 – Paper Title

Presenter 2 – Paper Title

Presenter 3 – Paper Title

Moderator: 

Coffee Break                                                                                                            4:15 – 4:30 p.m.

PANEL IV – Panel Title                                                                                          4:30 – 5:50 p.m.

Presenter 1 – Paper Title

Presenter 2 – Paper Title

Moderator: 

Closing Remarks                                                                                                       5:50 – 6:00 p.m.

Dinner at the UC Berkeley Faculty Club                                                                   6:30 p.m.  

PARTICIPANTS

Andrew Bradt (Berkeley)
Sergio Campos (Boston College)
Hanoch Dagan (Berkeley)
Avihay Dorfman (Tel Aviv University)
Katherine J Florey (UC Davis)
Jonah Gelbach (Berkeley)
Mark Gergen (Berkeley)
Myriam Gilles (Cardozo)
Helen Hershkoff (NYU)
Florencia Marotta-Wurgler (NYU)
Issachar Rosen-Zvi (Tel Aviv University)
Matthew Shapiro (Rutgers)
Ben Zipursky (Fordham)

Papers

Papers can only be accessed with a password. Please click the above “Papers” link to access the colloquium papers.

If you have any inquiries, please reach out to the interim event organizer, dkloss@law.berkeley.edu


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