Abstract
In the past decade litigation funding companies have assumed an increasingly prominent role in commercial litigation and class actions in Australia. The growth of commercial litigation funding is a predictable response to various features of Australia’s costs and fee allocation rules and practices, including the “loser pays” rule, the prohibition on lawyer’s charging contingency fees, the hourly billing practices of lawyers, and the open-ended and unpredictable nature of much civil litigation. This chapter explores the growth of commercial litigation funding in Australia and uses it as a window through which to view how Australia’s costs and fee allocation rules operate and interact.
Original language | Canadian English |
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Title of host publication | The Price of Access to the Civil Courts in Australia: Old Problems and New Solutions - A Commercial Litigation Funding Case Study |
Publication status | Published - Jan. 1 2011 |
Keywords
- Commercial Litigation
- Litigation Funding
- Class Actions
- Australia
- Civil Procedure
Disciplines
- Civil Procedure
- Comparative and Foreign Law
- Law
- Law and Economics
- Litigation