Abstract

Throughout the twentieth century, virtually all European countries that had studied the American class action had rejected implementation of the class action as a part of domestic law. In the early twenty­first century, however, several European countries reconsidered their longstanding antipathy to the American class action. The EU Parliament in 2013 issued a Recommendation for Injunctive and Compensatory Collective Redress Mechanisms requesting that all EU countries—by 2017—implement some form of collective redress mechanism. In May 2018, the Commission issued a Report assessing the practical implementation of the Recommendation. The Commission’s study reveals that the 28 EU countries have developed a patchwork quilt of differing approaches to collective redress. Although many EU countries have undertaken legislative initiatives and implemented some of the Commission’s recommendations, in a number of countries, several of the Commission’s principles have had little or no impact on domestic laws. Perhaps most significantly, the 28 EU countries largely have eschewed implementing procedural mechanisms that resemble the American class action rule, in efforts to preserve domestic cultural and legal norms, and to avoid American­style class action abuses. Thus, European initiatives towards implementing a class action device represent an American class action defense lawyer’s dream.

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