Litigation Law, Mediation Law and Arbitration Law

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Litigation law, mediation law, and arbitrage law thought leadership, articles, podcasts, videos and webinars from expert sources across the legal world. Explore insights covering civil law, class actions, dispute resolution, libel and defamation and more in relation to litigation, mediation and arbitration.
Article
Under Berk, Is State Court Better? Removing A Case To Federal Court May Now Cost Defendants An Early Exit Strategy.
The Supreme Court's decision in Berk v. Choy fundamentally altered the calculus for removing medical malpractice and professional liability cases to federal court by eliminating state affidavit-of-merit requirements. This shift transforms what was once a routine procedural decision into a strategic business choice with significant cost and timing implications.
United States Litigation
BS
Butler Snow LLP
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Article
Under Berk, Is State Court Better? Removing A Case To Federal Court May Now Cost Defendants An Early Exit Strategy.
The Supreme Court's decision in Berk v. Choy fundamentally altered the calculus for removing medical malpractice and professional liability cases to federal court by eliminating state affidavit-of-merit requirements. This shift transforms what was once a routine procedural decision into a strategic business choice with significant cost and timing implications.
United States Litigation
BS
Butler Snow LLP
See more
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Curated
Foreign Sovereign Immunity In International Construction
For hundreds of years, the world’s sovereign nations refused to allow any other foreign sovereign to be sued in their courts without the sovereign’s consent. The guiding principle was “absolute sovereign immunity,” an outgrowth of the ancient legal precept rex non potest peccare, understood to mean “the king can do no wrong.” The principle also was recognized as wise foreign policy because it extended "grace and comity" to other sovereigns.
United States Litigation
J
JAMS
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Article
Only The Strong Survive: Easy Pitfalls To Avoid As A Defamation Plaintiff
A recent North Carolina defamation case demonstrates how procedural missteps—missing deadlines, failing to name all defendants, or improperly characterizing statements—can lead to early dismissal. The case offers critical lessons for plaintiffs on navigating statutes of limitations, pre-suit notice requirements, and strategic complaint drafting to survive motions to dismiss.
United States Litigation
B
Benesch Friedlander Coplan & Aronoff LLP
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