Confidentiality club

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In English legal proceedings, a confidentiality club (also known as confidentiality ring)[1] is an agreement occasionally reached by parties to a litigation to reduce the risk of confidential documents being used outside the litigation. The agreement typically provides that only specified persons can access some documents. Setting up a confidentiality club "requires some degree of cooperation between the parties".[2] Confidentiality clubs were described in 2012 as being increasingly common.[3]

References[]

  1. ^ Sime, Stuart; French, Derek (2012). Blackstone's Civil Practice 2013: The Commentary. Oxford University Press. 48.35. ISBN 9780191645495.
  2. ^ Cook, Trevor; Garcia, Alejandro I. (2010). International Intellectual Property Arbitration - Volume 2 of Arbitration in context series. Kluwer Law International BV. p. 265. ISBN 9789041127259.
  3. ^ Matthews, Paul; Malek, Hodge M. (2012). Disclosure. Sweet & Maxwell. p. 441. ISBN 9780414047792.
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