Law School podcast

Structural Civil Procedure Part Five: Class Actions and Aggregate Litigation

13/03/2026
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This comprehensive session explores the intricate legal framework of class actions, focusing on Rule 23, constitutional safeguards, jurisdictional challenges, settlement approval, and policy debates. It provides essential insights for law students, practitioners, and anyone interested in civil procedure and aggregate litigation.


Most companies inadvertently undermine their own legal safety net when facing class actions. Why? Because the deep, hidden complexities of Federal Rule 23 reveal a power dynamic that can threaten even the largest corporations — unless you understand the monumental safeguards designed to protect due process. This episode dissects the intricate architecture of class certification, showing you how procedural formalities turn into constitutional shields or swords.

Imagine a lawsuit that binds millions without their direct involvement — sounds impossible? It’s not. We explore how the Supreme Court’s landmark rulings, like Walmart v. Dukes, have raised the bar for commonality, demanding that classes show their claims can generate a single common answer capable of resolving the entire case. The navigational challenge: balancing the need for judicial efficiency with fundamental constitutional protections like the right to opt-out and due process. If these guardrails fail, the entire system risks devolving into coercion, stripping individuals of their autonomy and risking massive litigation abuses.

You’ll discover:

The six critical steps to achieve class certification, from numerosity to adequacy, and why each is a mandatory gatekeeper.

How the Supreme Court’s heightened commonality standard now requires demonstrating a central issue capable of resolving the entire class—a far cry from pre-Dukes relaxed rules.

The stark difference between mandatory classes (B1 and B2) and damages classes (B3), and why the latter’s opt-out right is constitutionally vital.

The constitutional tension behind the limited fund and how due process limits the use of mandatory classes for purely monetary claims — a legal minefield for practitioners.

The high-stakes battle over personal jurisdiction, especially after Bristol-Myers Squibb, and how courts grapple with nationwide claims against out-of-state defendants.

The critical importance of notice — from traditional mail to social media ads — and how courts balance effective outreach against overreach and privacy concerns.

The ethical and procedural oversight required during settlement approval, where the judge must act as a fiduciary, scrutinizing fees, remedy adequacy, and fairness.

The profound policy trade-offs: the power of class actions to democratize justice versus their capacity for abuse, highlighting a systemic tension that underpins modern civil procedure.

Whether you're preparing for the bar or deepening your understanding of civil rights and mass litigation, this episode reveals how procedural rules shape substantive rights at a fundamental level. Every safeguard and exception we discuss rests on the fragile premise of constitutional due process—an principle that, if undermined, transforms what should be a tool for fairness into a weapon of coercion.

Dive in to master the architecture that makes class actions a double-edged sword—powerful enough to hold giants accountable, yet perilous without vigilant enforcement of procedural guardrails. Perfect for law students and practitioners alike, this episode equips you with the critical framework to analyze, argue, and understand aggregate litigation’s profound impact on justice and democracy.

Class Actions, Civil Procedure, Rule 23, Due Process, Jurisdiction, Settlement, Policy, Legal System, Litigation, Constitutional Law

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