With the recent explosion of high-profile court cases and
staggering jury awards, America's justice system has moved to the
forefront of our nation's consciousness. Yet while the average
citizen is bombarded with information about a few sensational
cases--such as the multi-million dollar damages awarded a woman who
burned herself with McDonald's coffee-- most Americans are unaware
of the truly dramatic transformation our courts and judicial system
have undergone over the past three decades, and of the need to
reform the system to adapt to that transformation.
In Reforming the Civil Justice System, Larry Kramer has compiled
a work that charts these revolutionary changes and offers solutions
to the problems they present. Organized into three parts, the book
investigates such topics as settlement incentives and joint
tortfeasors, substance and form in the treatment of scientific
evidence after Daubert v. Merrell Dow, and guiding jurors in
valuing pain and suffering damages. Reforming the Civil Justice
System offers feasible solutions that can realistically be adopted
as our civil justice system continues to be refined and
improved.
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