Principles of the Law, High-Volume Civil Adjudication is making its Annual Meeting debut this year. During the session, members will address core issues surrounding procedure and case management in high-volume civil adjudication, including approaches to notice and service of process, pleading and information exchange, the structure and role of hearings, and the entry and enforcement of judgments. These discussions will explore how procedural design can promote both efficiency and fairness in the resolution of large-scale claims.

In the below video, Reporter David Freeman Engstrom highlights how courts manage large volumes of claims and the challenges of balancing efficiency, fairness, and accuracy in modern civil litigation.

 

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David Freeman Engstrom

Reporter, High-Volume Civil Adjudication

David Freeman Engstrom is the LSVF Professor in Law and Co-Director of the Deborah L. Rhode Center on the Legal Profession, the premier academic center working to shape the future of legal services and access to the legal system. A far-ranging scholar of the design and implementation of litigation and regulatory regimes, Engstrom’s expertise encompasses civil procedure, complex litigation, administrative law, constitutional law, legal ethics, law and technology, and empirical legal studies.

Pauline Toboulidis

The American Law Institute