-
58 votes
-
Arizona abortion rights advocates submit double the signatures needed to put constitutional amendment on ballot
63 votes -
Despite Republican opposition, citizen-led abortion measures could be on the ballot in nine US states
41 votes -
Unanimous US Supreme Court preserves access to widely used abortion medication
46 votes -
Why the South Carolina redistricting case was decided six to three
4 votes -
Texas attorney general Ken Paxton is weaponizing consumer protection laws against nonprofit organizations
23 votes -
In a first, Belgium approves labour law for sex workers
41 votes -
Arizona governor Katie Hobbs signs abortion ban repeal bill
49 votes -
Denmark to liberalize its abortion law to allow the procedure until eighteenth week of pregnancy
22 votes -
Ronald Reagan-era emergency health care law is the next abortion flashpoint at the US Supreme Court
18 votes -
American non-compete clauses could become a thing of the past thanks to a new ruling
15 votes -
Indiana now has a religious right to abortion
28 votes -
Many Americans who recently bought guns open to political violence, survey finds
9 votes -
As elections loom, US Congressional maps challenged as discriminatory will remain in place
8 votes -
Bernie Sanders: It’s time for a four-day work week
52 votes -
Few states cover fertility treatment for same-sex couples, but that could be changing
4 votes -
California introduces 'right to disconnect' bill that would allow employees to possibly relax
23 votes -
US Government removes sanctions on Zimbabwe, imposes sanctions on Zimbabwe's president
8 votes -
France becomes the first country in the world to guarantee abortion as a constitutional right
58 votes -
A legal historian who studies the US abortion battle explains why the Alabama state Supreme Court’s decision on in vitro fertilization is so momentous
35 votes -
NGOs allowed to seize €2.9 million from Belgian government for failure to shelter asylum seekers
13 votes -
Finland's government has cited security concerns for the closure of all border crossings with Russia – Russian-speaking Finns say their rights are being violated
24 votes -
European Court of Human Rights rules that sex workers can seek compensation for lost profits, reversing Bulgarian decision about human trafficking victims
17 votes -
Nationalist leader convicted for ordering violence against Polish abortion rights, lgbtq rights, protester “Grandma Kate”
17 votes -
California public school students will learn about labor rights under first-of-its-kind law
44 votes -
Finland faces autumn of discontent with strikes and protests over government's austerity budget
8 votes -
India ‘weaponising global anti-terror fund’ to crack down on civil society groups, Amnesty says
16 votes -
Professionals in Sweden are pushing back hard against a rightwing plan to make them snitch on undocumented migrants
23 votes -
New Mexico Governor bans public carry of guns in Albuquerque
33 votes -
G20 leaders must hold Indian government to account for its human rights violations and political persecution
20 votes -
From fights over LGBT rights to prayer at school board meetings, Chino Valley California public schools have become ground zero for the culture wars
9 votes -
With no dedicated government minister or national representation, the Sámi go to the polls in a vote to elect twenty-one members of the Sámi Parliament in Inari, Finland
12 votes -
Opinion - Antonin Scalia was wrong about the meaning of ‘bear arms’ (2018)
33 votes -
One thousand inmates at a Wisconsin prison have been confined mostly to their cells for months, with little explanation
41 votes -
Voters in Ohio reject GOP-backed proposal that would have made it tougher to protect abortion rights
73 votes -
Anonymous sources say Alabama political maps are part of a plan by Republicans in the state Senate to break Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act, a long-held goal of many conservatives
22 votes -
Alabama is defying the US Supreme Court on voting rights
32 votes -
US lifts human rights violation designation on Ethiopia
11 votes -
How a year without Roe shifted American views on abortion
61 votes -
How and why the work of John Hart Ely a liberal scholar, profoundly influenced the Dobbs decision to overturn Roe v Wade re abortion rights in the US
5 votes -
US Supreme Court rules 5-4 against Navajo Nation, stating that United States has no "duty" to "supply tribes with adequate water"
73 votes -
How Olivier Vandecasteele became a pawn in Iran’s deadly diplomatic game
4 votes -
Rights expert urges Denmark and Greenland to examine colonial legacy’s impact
9 votes -
Europe's indigenous Sámi people have taken their fight for improved rights to the United Nations
8 votes -
Sanna Marin's human rights legislation for indigenous Sámi fails – Sámi Parliament Act failed to get past the final committee stage in Finnish parliament
3 votes -
Denmark to grant asylum to all women and girls from Afghanistan
11 votes -
Sanna Marin's Finnish government could collapse, as human rights laws stalled – new Sámi Parliament Act is the right of self-determination
6 votes -
UN rebukes Finland for violating rights of its children held in Syria camps – child rights committee says Helsinki must do more to repatriate those detained
3 votes -
How to make class action lawsuits more meaningful to the public
Have you ever received notice that you might be eligible for something from a class-action settlement? Ever notice that the effort required to recover is significant, and the recovery perhaps...
Have you ever received notice that you might be eligible for something from a class-action settlement? Ever notice that the effort required to recover is significant, and the recovery perhaps insultingly miniscule?
I don't know of any data, but I suspect that's true of nearly every class action lawsuit, even those that win in court battles. Maybe the original plaintiffs get a decent recovery, sometimes there's injunctive relief (which means the court forces the defendant to do or not do something). Every once in a while, individual members of the class get a meaningful outcome (vw's dieselgate comes to mind).
The public interest justification for the outcomes where the recover for class members is really small, if one is even ever really offered, is that the cost of the action to the defendant serves as an inducement to all defendants to keep their act together. But see, Tyler Durden's explanation of the actuarial function from Fight Club.
My thought is that instead of any recovery for the individual class members ("fuck 'em, right?"), their portion of the money should go to a public interest fund dedicated to consumer protection. My reason for this is that these small recoveries don't make any useful change for the individual class member consumers. But collectively, might add up to enough to make a meaningful difference to the future activities of producers.
Of course, all the usual caveats about corruption and accountability come into play. But there's a few reasons it might help, if those can be overcome. First, it might prompt faster, lest costly settlements. The payouts would be lower, and also the transaction costs. This shifts the litigation process from focussing on big recoveries to high volume of suits, bringing in more defendants. It would also enable smaller firms to bring suit, the hope being that smaller firms would take on more marginal cases and get more action.
Second, it might actually create a feedback loop. If the fund gets large enough, it could lobby and investigate, providing more information more new suits, and identifying the worst actors, and encouraging useful regulation. Imagine if Consumers Union could return to its glory of the 80's and have a big lobbying fund?
Or, we could just have decent government level consumer protections (hahhahahahahahahah!)
9 votes -
Ebrahim Raisi cancels CNN interview after Christiane Amanpour refuses to wear hijab
14 votes