Public-Private Litigation for Health
48 Pages Posted: 7 May 2021
Date Written: May 4, 2021
Abstract
Public health litigation can be a powerful mechanism for addressing public health harms where alternative interventions have failed. It can draw public attention to corporate misconduct, create a public record of the actions taken and harms done, and in an ideal world it could achieve both compensation for past harm and deterrence of future misconduct. But the full public health potential of these lawsuits is rarely achieved, even when the suits are brought on behalf of federal, state and local governments with the ostensible goal of protecting the health of the citizens. The increasing involvement of private attorneys in public litigation only adds to the challenges of using litigation to achieve public health goals.
While there are continuing debates over the desirability of litigation partnerships between state attorneys general (AGs) and private counsel, as a practical matter the involvement of private law firms in public litigation is unlikely to disappear any time soon. This Article fills a critical gap in the literature on the privatization of public litigation by showing why, despite their shortcomings, arrangements between state and private lawyers have the potential to satisfy public health goals that might otherwise remain out of reach. It provides a theory of legal R&D to show why these arrangements are not only likely to persist, but are also most likely to occur in high impact public health litigation. The Article then examines how the incentives of both state AGs and private law firms influence choices along the litigation pathway in ways that may undermine the potential to achieve public health value. It concludes by proposing a novel impact based approach to public-private litigation, providing a decision making framework that AGs could adopt to increase the role of public health objectives in the litigation process.
Keywords: public private partnerships; public health; litigation; attorneys general; impact statements
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