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55 Can. Bus. L.J. 1 (2014)
Commercial Litigation Funding: Ethical, Regulatory and Comparative Perspectives

handle is hein.journals/canadbus55 and id is 7 raw text is: THE                          REVUE
CANADIAN                   CANADIENNE DU
BUSINESS LAW                     DROIT DE
JOURNAL                      COMMERCE
Volume 55, No. 1                             March/Mars 2014
COMMERCIAL LITIGATION FUNDING: ETHICAL,
REGULATORY AND COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES
Camille Cameron* and Jasminka Kalajdzic**
There has been a proliferation of writing about commercial litigation
funding (Cor) over the past few years, in both the academic and
popular press. Too often, the literature presents a narrative of
extremes. Commentators are either wholly against CLF on the basis
that it gives rise to unethical behaviour and the commnodification of
our civil justice system, or itholly in support of it on the basis that it
promotes access to justice and levels the playing field. A conference
held at the University of Windsor Law School in July, 2013 brought
together leading scholars, judges and lawyers from the United States,
Australia and Canada to engage in a nuanced discussion about CLF
that mediated betieen these extreme polarities. The first conference
of its kind in Canada, discussion was focussed on four themes:
regulation, access to justice, ethics and impacts on class actions. In
this article, the conference organizers, Dean Camille Cameron and
Professor Jasminka Kalajdzic, survey the principal issues in the
debates around CLE, summarize the key points in the conference
papers, and identifv the basic principles that might inform the
regulation of litigation funding in Canada and elsewhere.
1. INTRODUCTION
There has been a proliferation of writing about commercial
litigation funding (CLF) over the past few years, in both the
academic and popular press. Too often, the literature presents a
narrative of extremes. Either litigation funding is the very best
vehicle for ensuring that litigants get access to lawyers and the civil
justice system, or it garishly commercializes the practice of law and
seriously undermines the civil justice system. Either litigation
*  Dean, Faculty of Law, University of Windsor, Canada.
** Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Windsor, Canada.

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