Pre-dispute arbitration agreements are vile. There is some legit support for reforming courts, or providing less formal access to courts, but the current US arbitration system meets all three definitions [0] of 'Kangaroo Court'<p>(some background)<p>I've been spending more than a year learning everything I can about arbitration.<p>1. <a href="https://arbitrationinformation.org/docs/problems/" rel="nofollow">https://arbitrationinformation.org/docs/problems/</a> - a detailed, well sourced, listing arbitration problems. I also include positives there. While its biased, it isn't actually biased against arbitration. It is biased <i>in favour of fairness and consumer rights</i>.<p>2. Every reference used on the website and many more: <a href="https://arbitrationinformation.org/docs/references/" rel="nofollow">https://arbitrationinformation.org/docs/references/</a> -- I have ready everything listed here <i>in full</i> including every footnote.<p>3. Every supreme court case (and some none USSC) case related. <a href="https://arbitrationinformation.org/docs/arbitration/" rel="nofollow">https://arbitrationinformation.org/docs/arbitration/</a> -- I have ready everything listed here <i>in full</i> including every footnote.<p>4. I've also read a lot not linked here. I don't include it because I've not yet read in full. I have a backlog of over 265 items to read. I intend to get to them all.<p>6. I am not an attorney. However, I am deeply familiar with law, have taken the same classes that lawyers take for continuing education (CLE courses) on the topic, and have attended (and will continue to attend) academic conferences on the topic.<p>7. Real lawyers - including some who have argued cases in front of the supreme court - on cases listed above - have told me that my website is both thorough and accurate. I'd include their endorsements, but I have not yet asked them for permission. Also, the site changes over time and I'd want to figure out a way to make to indicate <i>which version</i> of the site they endorsed.<p>8. On a personal note: I really dislike falsehoods and unfairness. I am almost obsessive on learning everything I can on this topic. Seriously.<p>9. I suspect, with good reason, that I can be reasonably be considered an 'expert' on the topic. The only people who know more than me on the topic are likely attorneys who specifically get paid to work on this area (consumer/employment/financial arbitration)<p>10A. I do have some blind spots: (a) I am not an attorney by training or trade. (b) I have been a client in arbitration but not a representative. Since arbitration is often confidential, and they aren't courts of record, its hard to learn about what actually happens inside the process.<p>10B. However, I am working on fixing this as much as I can. I'm in touch with both attorneys, academics, and (soon) arbitration providers to see what I could learn. I'm still working on figuring some additional ways to learn more.<p>[0] Kangaroo Court—Black’s Law Dictionary—Ninth Edition. (2009). In Bryan A. Garner (Ed.), Black’s Law Dictionary (Ninth Edition, p. 409). WEST - Thomson Reuters.