THE PROFIT OF PROLONGATION: A Five-Volume Examination of Legal Incentives, Retaliation, and Institutional Self-Protection

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Management number 233651107 Release Date 2026/06/27 List Price US$3.48 Model Number 233651107
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The Profit of Prolongation is a comprehensive, five-volume examination of how modern litigation systems reward delay, procedural escalation, and endurance over resolution and justice.Rather than focusing on individual misconduct, this work analyzes the structural incentives embedded in legal, regulatory, and oversight frameworks that make prolonged disputes economically rational while rendering timely resolution increasingly elusive. Across courts, professional regulators, and institutional review bodies, the system often functions less as a corrective mechanism and more as a closed loop that absorbs harm without accountability.Volume I explores the billable hour as a design architecture, examining how time-based billing, administrative inflation, and communication fragmentation transform legal services into revenue systems detached from substantive progress.Volume II examines delay and depletion as litigation tools, with particular attention to families, estates, and self-represented litigants whose finite resources make endurance unequal.Volume III analyzes retaliation by design, documenting how accountability efforts are often met not with correction but with procedural escalation, cost pressure, and isolation.Volume IV exposes institutional self-protection, where courts, regulators, and oversight bodies converge to prioritize procedural closure over substantive remedy.Volume V addresses coercion by withdrawal, including advance-fee demands and threatened abandonment of representation that manufacture delay and force litigants into procedural disadvantage.Written in clear, analytical prose, The Profit of Prolongation is not a personal grievance or exposé. It is a structural critique grounded in pattern recognition, systemic analysis, and public-interest reasoning. The work speaks to litigants, legal professionals, policymakers, scholars, and anyone concerned with access to justice in systems where process has overtaken purpose.This book argues that when systems reward delay, prolongation becomes profitable—and justice becomes optional. Read more

ASIN B0GCLGXVN1
XRay Not Enabled
Language English
File size 1.6 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 157 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Screen Reader Supported
Publication date December 26, 2025
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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