Linda S. Mullenix
- Morris and Rita Atlas Chair in Advocacy
- Professor
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Linda Mullenix holds the Morris and Rita Atlas Chair in Advocacy and teaches and writes about civil procedure, mass tort and class action litigation, and transnational collective redress. She is the author or co-author of 25 books including Public Nuisance: The New Mass Tort Frontier; Mass Tort Litigation; and Leading Cases in Civil Procedure. She is an elected life member of the American Law Institute, an elected life fellow of the American Bar Foundation, a life member of the Texas Bar Foundation, and an elected member of the International Association of Procedural Law. She has served as a Supreme Court Fellow; was a scholar-in-residence at the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Study and Conference Center in Italy; and held the Fulbright Senior Distinguished Chair in Law in Trento, Italy.
Featured Work
Keynote Address: Towards a Client-Centered Approach to Class Action and Complex Litigation Remedies
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LINDA S. MULLENIX holds the Morris and Rita Atlas Chair in Advocacy at the University of Texas School of Law. Professor Mullenix holds M.Phil. and Ph.D. degrees from Columbia University in political science and graduated Phi Beta Kappa, magna cum laude, from the City College of New York. She received her law degree from Georgetown University Law Center and practiced appellate litigation in Washington, D.C. She has held appointments as a Supreme Court Fellow at the Federal Judicial Center; was a scholar-in-residence at the Rockefeller Foundation Bellagio Study and Conference Center in Italy; and held the Fulbright Senior Distinguished Chair in Law in Trento, Italy. She has been a visiting professor at Harvard and Michigan Law Schools. Professor Mullenix has been a professor since 1974, teaching federal civil procedure, mass tort and class action litigation, complex multidistrict litigation, transnational collective redress measures, and state class action procedure. She also has taught federal courts, conflicts of law, professional responsibility, and civil justice reform.
In January 2012, Professor Mullenix was honored as a “Pathfinder 2012” by the Travis County Women’s Law Association "for her outstanding service to our legal community and continued inspiration as a role model and trailblazer," which recognizes women in the community who “have used their law degrees in ways that inspire the rest of us.” Professor Mullenix was a founding Director and served on the Board of Directors of the Fulbright Association of Austin and served as the vice-president of the Fulbright Commission Italian Interest Group.
Professor Mullenix is an elected Life Member of the American Law Institute, serving as the Associate Reporter for the Restatement of the Law Governing Lawyers, a consultative member of the Transnational Rules of Civil Procedure project and the Complex Litigation Project. In addition, Professor Mullenix is an elected Life Fellow of the American Bar Foundation, a Life Member of the Texas Bar Foundation, and an elected member of the International Association of Procedural Law. She was selected to contribute a chapter to the ALI's 2023 Centennial commemorative volume, on the ALI's aggregate litigation project.
Professor Mullenix is the author or co-author of twenty-five books including Public Nuisance: The New Mass Tort Frontier (Cambridge University Press 2024); Leading Cases in Civil Procedure (4th ed. 2023); Mass Tort Litigation (4th ed. 2023); Understanding Federal Courts (2d ed. 2015); Federal Courts in the Twenty-First Century (3d ed. 2007); State Class Action Practice and Procedure (2000); ALI Restatement Third, The Law Governing Lawyers (2000); and Moore's Federal Practice (2d and 3d Eds. with annual updates). She has contributed numerous book chapters and authored several professional reports. For over 35 years, Professor Mullenix has been a contributing writer for Preview of Supreme Court Cases and published hundredsof analyzes of pending Supreme Court cases dealing with procedure and federal courts. For over 30 years she wasa regular columnist for the National Law Journal.
She has written hundreds of articles published in The Chicago Legal Forum, Cornell Law Review, Georgetown University Law Journal, Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics, Harvard Law Review, Michigan Law Review, Michigan Journal of Law Reform, Minnesota Law Review, Stanford Law Review, Stanford Journal of Complex Litigation, University of Pennsylvania Law Review, Northwestern Law Review, Texas Law Review, The Review of Litigation, Vanderbilt Law Review, and the William & Mary Law Review, as well as numerous other journals. Federal and state courts throughout the United States have cited Professor Mullenix’s articles on procedure and complex litigation. Since 2000 she consistently has been ranked as a top-ten most cited procedure scholar in the U.S. She also has been ranked among the top 250 legal scholars in the U.S., writing in any field.
Professor Mullenix has broadly served the profession in a number of capacities, including as Reporter for an ABA Task Force on Class Actions; Reporter for the Southern District of Texas, Civil Justice Reform Act; Reporter for the National Conference of Federal-State Judicial Relationships; Advisor, Texas Class Action Rules Subcommittee; and Advisor, National Center for State Courts, Study on Civil Discovery. Professor Mullenix has been an invited participant numerous conferences including the ABA Conference on the Future of Class Action Litigation in America; the Symposium on Cutting Edge Issues in Class Action Litigation, The Legal Forum, University of Chicago; the Class Action Conference, Judicial Conference Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure; the Gulf States Class Action Symposium; the University of Pennsylvania Symposium: Mass Torts; the ABA Class Action Institute; the Mass Tort Working Group, Judicial Conference Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure; the Special Study Conference on Federal Rules Governing Attorney Conduct, Judicial Conference Committee on Rules of Practice and Procedure; the Research Conference on Class Actions, Institute for Judicial Administration and N.Y.U.; the Conference on Civil Procedure and the Future of the Federal Rules, Southwest Legal Foundation; the National Mass Tort Litigation Conference; and served as a faculty member for the Annual Conference on Complex Litigation and Resolution of Class Action Litigation. Professor Mullenix has mentored junior scholars through participation in federal courts junior scholarship workshops, and the Harvard Law School Culp Colloquium.
Since 2019 Professor Mullenix has been a collaborator on the multi-year comparative law project, Open Access CPLJ Project, Comparative Procedural Law and Justice: Power and Authority in Dispute Resolution, sponsored by the Max Planck Institute for Procedural Justice (Luxembourg). She has served on a number of advisory boards, including most recently the Scholars’ Council of the Humphreys Complex Litigation Center at George Washington University School of Law, and as a Forbes Legal Advisor.
She has appeared as a radio commentator on National Public Radio, a media commentator for Bloomberg News, and been quoted in The New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, the National Law Journal, CNNOpinion.com, and the Guardian (U.K.), among other media publications. Professor Mullenix has worked as counsel and as a consulting expert with plaintiffs, defendants, and objectors on numerous prominent federal and state class action cases. She has delivered lectures relating to class action and complex litigation in Austria, Australia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Croatia, Germany, Israel, Italy, Luxembourg, The Netherlands, South Africa, Switzerland, and the U.K.
Professor Mullenix has three sons and six grandchildren. She holds dual citizenship with Italy.
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year-1998
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Article
Getting to Shutts
Linda S. Mullenix, Getting to Shutts [Symposium in Honor of Prof. Robert Casad], 46 University of Kansas Law Review 727 (1998).
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Article
Federal Removal, the Eleventh Amendment, State Remand, and Other Exercises in Futility
Linda S. Mullenix, Federal Removal, the Eleventh Amendment, State Remand, and Other Exercises in Futility, 1997-98 Preview of U.S. Supreme Court Cases 447.
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Article
Practical Wisdom and Third-Generation Mass Tort Litigation
Linda S. Mullenix, Conclusion: Practical Wisdom and Third-Generation Mass Tort Litigation [Symposium on Mass Tort Litigation], 31 Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review 551 (1998).
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Article
The Pervasive Myth of Pervasive Discovery Abuse: The Sequel
Linda S. Mullenix, The Pervasive Myth of Pervasive Discovery Abuse: The Sequel [Advisory Committee on Civil Rules, Conference on Discovery], 39 Boston College Law Review 683 (1998).
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Article
Getting Out of Dodge: May a Defendant Remove a State Case to Federal Court Based Solely on a Federal Preclusion Defense?
Linda S. Mullenix, Getting Out of Dodge: May a Defendant Remove a State Case to Federal Court Based Solely on a Federal Preclusion Defense?, 1997-98 Preview of U.S. Supreme Court Cases 219.
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Book
Civil Procedure: Exam Pro
Linda S. Mullenix, Civil Procedure: Exam Pro (St. Paul: Thomson/West, 2nd ed. 2007; St. Paul: West, 1998).
year-1997
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Article
Supreme Court Review: Court Settles Settlement Class Issue
Linda S. Mullenix, Supreme Court Review: Court Settles Settlement Class Issue, National Law Journal, Aug. 11, 1997, at B12.
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Article
Must Settlement Classes Satisfy All the Requirements of Litigation Classes?
Linda S. Mullenix, Must Settlement Classes Satisfy All the Requirements of Litigation Classes?, 1996-97 preview of U.S. Supreme Court Cases 296.
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Article
The Constitutionality of the Proposed Rule 23 Class Action Amendments
Linda S. Mullenix, The Constitutionality of the Proposed Rule 23 Class Action Amendments [Symposium, Rule 23: Class Actions at the Crossroads], 39 Arizona Law Review 615 (1997).
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Book
Federal Courts: Case Notes Series
Linda S. Mullenix, Federal Courts (Santa Monica, CA: Casenotes Publishing Co., 1997, with Howard P. Fink).
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Article
Do Mandatory Monetary-Settlement Classes Violate Due Process?
Linda S. Mullenix, Do Mandatory Monetary-Settlement Classes Violate Due Process?, 1996-97 Preview of U.S. Supreme Court Cases 221. -
Book
Report of the ABA Tort and Insurance Practice Section, Task Force on Class Actions Concerning Proposed Changes to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
Linda S. Mullenix, Report of the ABA Tort and Insurance Practice Section, Task Force on Class Actions Concerning Proposed Changes to Rule 23 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (1997, Reporter).
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Book
17 Moore's Federal Practice: Venue; Interrelationship of State and Federal Courts
Linda S. Mullenix, 17 Moore's Federal Practice: Venue; Interrelationship of State and Federal Courts (New York: Matthew Bender, 3rd ed. 1997, with Georgene M. Vairo).
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Article
The Jurisprudence of Yogi Berra
Linda S. Mullenix, The Jurisprudence of Yogi Berra, 46 Emory Law Journal 697 (1997) (with 38 co-authors).
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Book
Civil Procedure: Aspen Roadmap Series
Linda S. Mullenix, Civil Procedure (Aspen RoadMap series; New York: Aspen Law & Business, 1997).
year-1996
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Article
Do Mandatory Monetary Settlement Classes Violate Due Process?
Linda S. Mullenix. “Do Mandatory Monetary Settlement Classes Violate Due Process?.” In 4 Preview of United States Supreme Court Cases, Page 221 (December 6, 1996). View online. -
Article
High Court Should Review Mass Torts
Linda S. Mullenix, High Court Should Review Mass Torts, National Law Journal, Oct. 7, 1996, at A19.
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Article
Transferring a State Court Case to Federal Court: When Must the Grounds for Transfer Exist?
Linda S. Mullenix, Transferring a State Court Case to Federal Court: When Must the Grounds for Transfer Exist?, 1996-97 Preview of U.S. Supreme Court Cases 87.
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Article
Supreme Court Review: New Opinions Defer to State Law, Courts
Linda S. Mullenix, Supreme Court Review: New Opinions Defer to State Law, Courts, National Law Journal, July 29, 1996, at C5.
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Article
Declining to Decide: Is a Federal Court's Decision to Send a Case Back to State Court in Deference to Ongoing State Proceedings Immediately Appealable?
Linda S. Mullenix, Declining to Decide: Is a Federal Court's Decision to Send a Case Back to State Court in Deference to Ongoing State Proceedings Immediately Appealable?, 1995-96 Preview of U.S. Supreme Court Cases 224.