The Dangerous Consequences of Repealing the CFPB’s Arbitration Rule
Without the possibility of class action lawsuits, consumers are now more vulnerable to corporate fraud.
David L. Noll is an associate professor at Rutgers Law School, where he teaches and writes in the fields of civil procedure, complex litigation, and public law. His work on class actions and arbitration has appeared in the New York University Law Review, California Law Review, and Stanford Journal of Complex Litigation, among other venues.
Without the possibility of class action lawsuits, consumers are now more vulnerable to corporate fraud.