The Centrist Case Against Current (Conservative) Arbitration Law

Issue Date
2017-03-03Publisher
Florida Law Review
Type
Article
Article Version
Article
Published Version
http://scholarship.law.ufl.edu/flr/vol68/iss5/1/Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
In The Politics of Arbitration Law and Centrist Proposals for Reform, I explained how issues surrounding consumer and other adhesive arbitration agreements became divisive along predictable political lines (progressives vs. conservatives) and proposed an intermediate (or centrist) position to resolve those issues. However, The Politics of Arbitration Law did not argue the case for my proposals. It left those arguments for this Article, which makes the case against current (conservative) arbitration law, and a third article, which will make the case against progressive proposals to reform arbitration law. In other words, this Article stands out from the many other articles critiquing current arbitration law because this Article’s critique comes from a centrist, rather than progressive, perspective. For that reason, this Article’s critique may be more likely than progressive critiques to gain traction with lawmakers.
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Citation
The Centrist Case against Current (Conservative) Arbitration Law, 68 FLORIDA LAW REVIEW 1227 (2016).
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