Charles M. Silver
- Roy W. and Eugenia C. McDonald Endowed Chair of Civil Procedure
- Professor
Charles Silver teaches courses on civil procedure, health law, and professional responsibility. His current research focuses on aggregate lawsuits, attorneys’ fees, professional responsibility, and health care law and policy. He previously worked with a group of empirical researchers on studies of medical malpractice litigation in Texas for over a decade. Professor Silver has authored several publications, including his most recent books “Medical Malpractice Litigation: How It Works, What It Does, And Why Tort Reform Hasn’t Helped” and “Overcharged: Why Americans Pay Too Much for Health Care.”
Featured Work
Charles Silver holds the Roy W. and Eugenia C. McDonald Endowed Chair of Civil Procedure at the University of Texas at Austin School of Law. His research focuses on aggregate lawsuits (including class actions and other mass proceedings), attorneys’ fees (including contractual compensation arrangements, common fund fee awards, and statutory fee awards), professional responsibility (focusing on lawyers involved in civil litigation on behalf of plaintiffs and defendants), and health care law and policy (with an emphasis on the payment system). For over a decade, he worked with a group of empirical researchers on studies of medical malpractice litigation in Texas. He served as an Associate Reporter on the Principles of Aggregate Litigation, which the American Law Institute published in 2010. His recent books are Overcharged: Why Americans Pay Too Much For Health Care (Cato Inst. 2018), coauthored with David A. Hyman, and Medical Malpractice Litigation: How It Works—Why Tort Reform Hasn’t Helped (Cato Inst. 2021), coauthored with Bernard S. Black, David A. Hyman, Myungho Paik, and William M. Sage.
No publications or activities matching the current search and filters.
year-2002
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Article
Introduction: Civil Justice Fact and Fiction [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity]
Lynn A. Baker, Introduction: Civil Justice Fact and Fiction [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity], 80 Texas Law Review 1537 (2002) (with Charles Silver). View article -
Article
Introduction: Civil Justice Fact and Fiction
Charles M. Silver, Introduction: Civil Justice Fact and Fiction [Symposium: The Impact of Civil Justice on the American Economy & Polity], 80 Texas Law Review 1537 (2002) (with Lynn A. Baker).
year-2001
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Article
Defense Lawyers' Professional Responsibilities: Part II--Contested Coverage Cases
Charles M. Silver, Defense Lawyers' Professional Responsibilities: Part II--Contested Coverage Cases, 15 Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics 29 (2001) (with Ellen S. Pryor). -
Article
Just What the Patient Ordered: The Case for Result-Based Compensation Arrangements
Charles M. Silver, Just What the Patient Ordered: The Case for Result-Based Compensation Arrangements, 29 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 170 (2001) (with David A. Hyman). -
Article
You Get What You Pay For: Result-Based Compensation for Health Care
Charles M. Silver, You Get What You Pay For: Result-Based Compensation for Health Care, 58 Washington & Lee Law Review 1427 (2001) (with David A. Hyman). -
Article
A Critique of Burrow v. Arce
Charles M. Silver, A Critique of Burrow v. Arce, 26 William & Mary Environmental Law & Policy Review 323 (2001).
year-2000
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Book Chapter
Representative Lawsuits & Class Actions
Charles M. Silver, Representative Lawsuits & Class Actions, in 5 Encyclopedia of Law and Economics 194 (B. Bouckaert & G. De Geest eds; Cheltenham, U.K.: Edward Elgar, 2000). -
Article
Defense Lawyers' Professional Responsibilities: Part I--Excess Exposure Cases
Charles M. Silver, Defense Lawyers' Professional Responsibilities: Part I--Excess Exposure Cases, 78 Texas Law Review 599 (2000) (with Ellen S. Pryor). -
Book Review
What's Not To Like About Being a Lawyer?
Charles M. Silver, What's Not To Like About Being a Lawyer?, 109 Yale Law Journal 1443 (2000) (with Frank B. Cross). [Essay reviewing Lawyer: A Life of Counsel and Controversy, by Arthur L. Liman.] -
Article
Due Process and the Lodestar Method: You Can't Get There from Here
Charles M. Silver, Due Process and the Lodestar Method: You Can't Get There from Here, 74 Tulane Law Review 1809 (2000).
year-1999
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Article
How Not to Start an Ethics Investigation
Charles M. Silver, How Not to Start an Ethics Investigation, Texas Lawyer, Feb. 1, 1999, at 33. -
Article
Preliminary Thoughts on the Economics of Witness Preparation
Charles M. Silver, Preliminary Thoughts on the Economics of Witness Preparation, 30 Texas Tech Law Review 1383 (1999). -
Article
The Aggregate Settlement Rule and Ideals of Client Service
Charles M. Silver, The Aggregate Settlement Rule and Ideals of Client Service, 41 South Texas Law Review 227 (1999) (with Lynn A. Baker).
year-1998
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Article
Yale Should Censure Most Famous Grad
Charles M. Silver, Yale Should Censure Most Famous Grad, National Law Journal, Sept. 14, 1998, at A21. -
Article
Just Blowing Smoke
Charles M. Silver, Just Blowing Smoke, Texas Lawyer, June 8, 1998, at 32. -
Article
Stiffing of Lawyers a Payback for Donations to Opponents
Charles M. Silver, Stiffing of Lawyers a Payback for Donations to Opponents, Fort Lauderdale Sun-Sentinel, May 11, 1998, at 9A. -
Article
The $2.3 Billion Question: Ethical Thing to Do Is to Pay Lawyers
Charles M. Silver, The $2.3 Billion Question: Ethical Thing to Do Is to Pay Lawyers, Austin American-Statesman, Feb. 7, 1998, at A15. -
Article
Was the Price Right?
Charles M. Silver, Was the Price Right?, Texas Lawyer, Feb. 2, 1998, at 22. -
Article
The Lost World: Of Politics and Getting the Law Right
Charles M. Silver, The Lost World: Of Politics and Getting the Law Right, 26 Hofstra Law Review 773 (1998). -
Article
I Cut, You Choose: The Role of Plaintiffs' Counsel in Allocating Settlement Proceeds
Charles M. Silver, I Cut, You Choose: The Role of Plaintiffs' Counsel in Allocating Settlement Proceeds, 84 Virginia Law Review 1465 (1998) (with Lynn A. Baker).