Thursday, October 20, 2005

delay 

I'm going to be delayed in updating this for awhile. It's AALS season. Sorry.

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

almost caught up 

A journal that is almost caught up:

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2005 issue of the American Law and Economics Review has Richard T. Boylan, What Do Prosecutors Maximize? Evidence from the Careers of U.S. Attorneys .

The June 2005 issue of the Boston University Law Review has articles from a symposium on The Lochner Centennial.

The July 2005 issue of the California Law Review has Melvin A. Eisenberg, Actual and Virtual Specific Performance, the Theory Of Efficient Breach, and the Indifference Principle in Contract Law; and David A. Super, Are Rights Efficient? Challenging the Managerial Critique of Individual Rights.

The most recent issue of the Chicago-Kent Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Must We Choose Between Rationality and Irrationality?.

The May 2005 issue of the Iowa Law Review has Jason Mazzo, Unamendments.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Access To Justice: Can Business Coexist With The Civil Justice System?.

The most recent issue of the Maine Law Review has essays on Reflections from the Bench.

The most recent issue of the Santa Clara Law Review has articles from a symposium on the Scwarzenegger Bobblehead Case.

The Summer 2005 issue of the University of Cincinnati Law Review has Alex Glashausser, What We Must Never Forget When It Is a Treaty We Are Expounding.

The September 2005 issue of the Virginia Law Review has Nicole Stelle Garnett, Relocating Disorder; Eugene Kontorovich, The Constitution in Two Dimensions: A Transaction Cost Analysis of Constitutional Remedies; and Alan Schwartz, A Normative Theory of Business Bankruptcy.

The Spring 2005 issue of the West Virginia Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled A Look at Brown v. Board of Education in West Virginia: Remembering the Past, Examining the Present, and Preparing for the Future.

Wednesday, September 14, 2005

catching up 

Journal that appear to be catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running late:

law review headlines 

The April 2005 issue of the American University Law Review has A Review of Recent Decisions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit.

The most recent issue of the Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law has articles on International Law and Indigenous Peoples.

The Winter 2005 issue of the Florida State University Law Review has articles on Judicial Review.

The most recent issue of the New York University Environmental Law Journal has Jack Van Doren, Environmental Law and the Regulatory State: Postmodernism Rears Its "Ugly" Head?.

The Winter 2005 issue of the Tennessee Law Review has Laura Krugman Ray, America Meets the Justices: Explaining the Supreme Court to the General Reader.

Friday, September 09, 2005

new journal 

The Journal of Food Law and Policy just came out with its first issue. Congrats!

name changes 

The Berkeley Women's Law Journal has changed its name to the Berkeley Journal of Gender, Law, and Justice.

The Catholic Lawyer has changed its name to the Journal of Catholic Legal Studies.

The University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change has changed its name to the Journal of Law and Social Change at the University of Pennsylvania.

Thursday, September 08, 2005

really behind 

Okay, so I've fallen several months behind, during this job transition and all. So what I'm going to do is just update the database and the late lists, and let you all figure everything out from there. The daily headlines should be up and running again soon.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that still seems to be behind:

law review headlines 

The March 2005 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has Michael J. Glennon, How International Rules Die.

The July-August 2005 issue of the Harvard Business Review has a Special Double Issue on High Performance Organization.

almost caught up 

A journal that is almost caught up:

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that seem to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2005 issue of the Administrative Law Review has Thomas O. McGarity, Federal Regulation of Mad Cow Disease Risks; Mariano-Florentino Cuéllar, Rethinking Regulatory Democracy; Jerry L. Mashaw, Norms, Practices, and the Paradox of Deference: A Preliminary Inquiry into Agency Statutory Interpretation; and Brian M. Zimmet, FERC's Authority to Impose Monetary Remedies for Federal Power Act and Natural Gas Act Violations: An Analysis.

The most recent issue of the Akron Law Review has Risa L. Lieberwitz, The Corporatization of Academic Research: Whose Interests Are Served?.

The February 2005 issue of the American University Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Overcriminalization: The Politics of Crime.

The December 2004 issue of the Cardozo Public Law, Policy, and Ethics Journal has articles on Hegel's Logic of the Concept.

The most recent issue of the Case Western Journal of International Law has articles from a symposium entitled Terrorism on Trial.

The Summer 2005 issue of the Chicago Journal of International Law has articles from a symposium on Issues in Space Law, including Steven A. Mirmina and David J. Den Herder, Nuclear Power Sources and Future Space Exploration (hi Steve!), as well as articles from a symposium on Sovereign Debt Restructuring.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Columbia Human Rights Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Migration and Refuge in the Twenty-First Century: A Symposium in Memory of Arthur Helton.

The May 2005 issue of the Columbia Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Sentencing: What’s at Stake for the States?.

The Summer 2005 issue of Criminal Justice has articles from a symposium on Crawford.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Drake Law Review has articles from its Criminal Justice System Reform Symposium.

The most recent issue of the Employee Rights and Employment Policy Journal has articles from a symposium on Workplace Bullying.

The February 2005 issue of the Fordham International Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled The United Nations and the Law of War.

The Summer 2004 issue of the George Mason Law Review has J. Howard Beales, III, Advertising to Kids and the FTC: A Regulatory Retrospective That Advises the Present; Timothy J. Brennan, "Vertical Market Power" As Oxymoron: Horizontal Approaches to Vertical Antitrust; Sencer Ecer and Richard S. Higgins, A Welfare Analysis of Prohibitions on Reverse Payments in Pharmaceutical Patent Disputes, With and Without the Hatch-Waxman Entry Injunction; Pauline M. Ippolito, What Can We Learn from Food Advertising Policy Over the Last 25 Years?; David T. Scheffman and Richard S. Higgins, Vertical Mergers: Theory and Policy; and Todd J. Zywicki, Debra Holt, and Maureen K. Ohlhausen, Obesity and Advertising Policy.

The April 2005 issue of the George Washington Law Review has Kevin A. Kordana and David H. Tabachnick, Rawls and Contract Law.

The Summer 2005 issue of the Georgetown International Environmental Law Review has discussions from a symposium on The International Responses to the Environmental Impacts of War, with participants including Edith Brown Weiss, Daniel Magraw, and Mark Drumbl. Check it out, and not just because the symposium was run by some great students, Kristen Hite, Jolie Apicella, and Judith Wallace, or because it's my alma journal.

The Fall 2005 issue of the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics has articles from FTC Workshop: Protecting Consumer Interests.

The May 2005 issue of ICON: International Journal of Constitutional Law has articles from a Symposium on the Proposed European Constitution.

The Winter 2005 issue of the Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology has articles from a symposium entitled Innocence in Capital Sentencing.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Law and Psychology Review has Jeremy A. Blumenthal, Does Mood Influence Moral Judgment? An Empirical Test with Legal and Policy Implications; and Monica K. Miller and Brian H. Bornstein, Religious Appeals in Closing Arguments: Impermissible Input or Benign Banter?.

The June 2005 issue of the Law and Society Review has Timothy R. Johnson, James F. Spriggs II, and Paul J. Wahlbeck, Passing and Strategic Voting on the U.S. Supreme Court; and Mariana Valverde, Authorizing the Production of Urban Moral Order: Appellate Courts and Their Knowledge Games.

The Summer 2005 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles from a symposium on Expert Testimony: Bridging Bioethics and Evidence Law.

The Summer 2005 issue of the Lewis and Clark Law Review has Carol M. Rose, Environmental Law Grows Up (More or Less), and What Science Can Do to Help.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Louisiana Law Review has articles from a symposium on Harmless Error.

The most recent issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled At the Crossroads of Law & Technology: Fifth Annual Conference, Alternative Methods for Protecting Digital Content.

The most recent issue of the New York University Annual Survey of American Law has Stephen J. Choi and G. Mitu Gulati, Mr. Justice Posner? Unpacking the Statistics; and Alexandra White Dunahoe, Revisiting the Cost-Benefit Calculus of the Misbehaving Prosecutor: Deterrence Economics and Transitory Prosecutors.

The Summer 2004 issue of the New York University Journal of International Law and Politics has articles from a symposium on The Legal and Socio-Economic Status of Arab Citizens in Israel.

The June 2005 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has articles from a symposium on The Judicial Center.

The most recent issue of the Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics and Public Policy has articles from a symposium on Medical Ethics.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Roger Williams University Law Review has articles from a symposium on Religious Liberty in America and Beyond: Celebrating the Legacy of Roger Williams on the 400th Anniversary of his Birth.

The Summer 2005 issue of the South Texas Law Review has articles from a symposium on House Bill 4.

The most recent issue of St. Mary's Law Journal has articles from the Fourth Annual Symposium on Legal Malpractice and Professional Responsibility.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Stetson Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Brown v. Board of Education and the Principle of Equality in Higher Education.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Tax Law Review has David A. Weisbach, The (Non)Taxation of Risk.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Texas International Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Globalization and the Judiciary.

The April 2005 issue of the University of Pennsyvlania Journal of Constitutional Law has Michael J. Gerhardt, The Limited Path Dependency of Precedent. The February 2005 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Constitutional Law has articles from a symposium entitled Race Jurisprudence and the Supreme Court: Where Do We Go From Here?.

The Spring 2005 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor and Employment Law has articles from a symposium on Labor Law.

The June 2005 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has articles on Current Debates in the Conflict of Laws.

The first 2005 issue of the Villanova Environmental Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Chevron.

The June 2005 issue of the Virginia Law Review has Stephen F. Smith, Proportionality and Federalization; Adrian Vermeule, Essay, Selection Effects in Constitutional Law; and Shlomit Wallerstein, Essay, Justifying the Right to Self-Defense: A Theory of Forced Consequences.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Wayne Law Review has articles from a symposium on Brown v. Board of Education.

The Summer 2005 issue of the Whittier Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Boundaries of International Law.

The April 2005 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has Michael Steven Green, Legal Realism As Theory of Law; and Norman W. Spaulding, The Discourse of Law in Time of War: Politics and Professionalism During the Civil War and Reconstruction.

The Summer 2005 issue of the Yale Journal of International Law has articles from a symposium entitled Nation-Building in the Middle East.

The April 2005 issue of the Yale Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled On Democratic Ground: New Perspectives on John Hart Ely.

Thursday, June 09, 2005

caught up 

A journal that has caught up (congrats!):

new journal announcement! 

A new journal (congrats!):

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