Privatizing Justice Privatizing Justice
Studies in Postwar American Political Development

Privatizing Justice

Arbitration and the Decline of Public Governance in the U.S.

    • $499.00
    • $499.00

Descripción editorial

One of the primary goals of the 1970s-era conservative legal movement was to undo New Deal policies that favored labor at the expense of capital. One of the movement's most effective strategies turned out to be advancing bipartisan legislation on arbitration and convincing the courts that settling disputes that way was preferable to litigation. Today, most consumers and employees today are bound by arbitration agreements, in which they are required to submit all future grievances to a private, binding system of arbitration and forfeit access to the legal system. Arbitration as originally conceived well over a century ago, however, stands in stark contrast to the arbitration in practice today. What changed is that Congress, the Supreme Court, and the private sector began to promote its use in the late twentieth century as a means of protecting corporate and other powerful institutional defendants from the costs of litigation and government regulation itself.

How did arbitration shift from providing a low cost, less adversarial, and more efficient way of handling disputes between entities of equal bargaining power to a private, non-reviewable, compulsory forum for resolving disputes between individuals and corporations, often on unilateral terms? By examining the broader institutional, political, and legal dynamics that shaped and enabled these processes of change over the past 150 years, Privatizing Justice examines how this transformation came about. The product of a broad range of actors and institutions interacting with each other--Congress, presidents, the courts, the administrative state, interest groups, and the business community-the system that emerged has not only transformed the American state in profound ways but exacerbated economic inequality and eroded democracy.

GÉNERO
Política y actualidad
PUBLICADO
2024
23 de abril
IDIOMA
EN
Inglés
EXTENSIÓN
304
Páginas
EDITORIAL
Oxford University Press
VENDEDOR
The Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford trading as Oxford University Press
TAMAÑO
2.3
MB

Otros libros de esta serie

Captive Market Captive Market
2022
Short Circuiting Policy Short Circuiting Policy
2020
Mobilized by Injustice Mobilized by Injustice
2020
Framing Inequality Framing Inequality
2019
The Cities on the Hill The Cities on the Hill
2018
Politics at Work Politics at Work
2018