Governing Securities Class Actions

16 Pages Posted: 5 Jul 2012

Date Written: 2011

Abstract

This short essay, written for a symposium on The Principles and Politics of Aggregate Litigation: CAFA, PSLRA, and Beyond, decouples due process from a proceduralist’s intuition and explains why it matters in securities class actions. It begins by exploring several analytical models that shed light on the representative relationship in class actions, including a public law analogy to the administrative state, a private law analogy to corporate law, and another, more modern public law analogy to political governance. After finding that the political-governance model best addresses both sources of inadequate representation in securities class actions — rifts between class members and class counsel, and between class members and their lead plaintiff — this Essay argues that incorporating qualified class members into securities class action governance will improve due process and legitimacy in securities litigation just as it does in the political sphere.

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Suggested Citation

Burch, Elizabeth Chamblee, Governing Securities Class Actions (2011). University of Cincinnati Law Review, Vol. 80, 2011, UGA Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2101345, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2101345

Elizabeth Chamblee Burch (Contact Author)

University of Georgia Law School ( email )

225 Herty Drive
Athens, GA 30602
United States

HOME PAGE: http://https://www.law.uga.edu/profile/elizabeth-chamblee-burch

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