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BYU Law Review

Abstract

The prevailing academic consensus is that bankruptcy judges are specialists presiding over specialized courts. This Article contends that this description is incomplete and, in some respects, inaccurate. Drawing on scholarly models of judicial specialization and historical surveys of the field, this Article contends that bankruptcy judges reflect a hybrid design choice: procedural specialization combined with substantive generalism. This model delivers many of the observed benefits of judicial specialization (including efficiency and technical competence) while preserving the cross-pollination of ideas and other benefits associated with the generalist tradition of American judging.

This Article also reflects on contemporary developments—most notably the rise of the “complex case panel” that attracts a disproportionate number of large public company reorganizations. This trend has resulted in a handful of bankruptcy judges serving as de facto reorganization specialists. In doing so, it has disrupted the generalist design of the bankruptcy courts by increasing case concentration and attendant risks, including tunnel vision.

By recharacterizing the bankruptcy judges as generalists as well as specialists, this Article offers a fresh lens for evaluating decision makers in the field. It also contributes to the broader literature on judicial specialization. Previous accounts have emphasized that particular institutions exist along a continuum between true generalism and focused specialization. Through a focus on the bankruptcy field, this Article suggests that procedural and substantive expertise represent separate and potentially independent dimensions of specialization.

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