Friday, January 30, 2004
catching up
A journal that is catching up:
- Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004, Winter 2003 issue came out in September 2003, and Summer 2002 issue came out in July 2003)
law review headlines
The Spring 2003 issue of the Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly has Richard G. Wilkins, Scott Worthington, Adam Becker, and Sara Becker, Supreme Court Voting Behavior: 2001 Term.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of San Francisco Law Review has articles from a symposium on Mandatory Arbitration Clauses.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of San Francisco Law Review has articles from a symposium on Mandatory Arbitration Clauses.
call for papers
The Institute for Global Environmental Studies is currently calling for manuscripts for its journal, the "International Review for Environmental Strategies (IRES)". The submission deadline is March 31, 2004. IRES is a peer-reviewed biannual journal aimed at contributing to the development of strategically and policy-oriented environmental research to address global environmental issues.
The Volume 4 Number 1 issue, to be published in February 2004, will cover multiple aspects of environmental education. Topics such as contributions of international institutes, ecotourism for sustainability, and business aspect in environmental education will be examined with many regional case studies.
For more information: http://www.iges.or.jp/en/pub/ires/ires.html
For questions/suggestions, please e-mail to: IRESInquiry@iges.or.jp
The Volume 4 Number 1 issue, to be published in February 2004, will cover multiple aspects of environmental education. Topics such as contributions of international institutes, ecotourism for sustainability, and business aspect in environmental education will be examined with many regional case studies.
For more information: http://www.iges.or.jp/en/pub/ires/ires.html
For questions/suggestions, please e-mail to: IRESInquiry@iges.or.jp
Thursday, January 29, 2004
caught up
Journals that have caught up:
Congrats!
- Whittier Law Review (Winter 2003 issue came out in January 2004, Fall 2003 issue came out in December 2003 and the Winter 2002 issue came out in July 2003)
- William and Mary Bill of Rights Journal (December 2003 issue came out in January 2004 and April 2003 issue came out in November 2003 and both February 2003 and December 2002 issues came out in August 2003)
Congrats!
law review headlines
The Fall 2003 issue of the Arizona State Law Journal has Debra Lyn Bassett, The Politics of the Rural Vote; and John J. Capowski, Evidence and the One-Liner: A Beginning Evidence Professor's Exploration of the Use of Humor in the Law School Classroom; and David A. Thomas, Predicting Law School Academic Performance from LSAT Scores and Undergraduate Grade Point Averages: A Comprehensive Study.
The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform has articles from A Colloquium on Immigration Reform.
The Winter 2003 issue of the Whittier Law Review has articles from its Twenty-First Annual Health Law Symposium on "Global Perspectives on HIV and AIDS".
The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform has articles from A Colloquium on Immigration Reform.
The Winter 2003 issue of the Whittier Law Review has articles from its Twenty-First Annual Health Law Symposium on "Global Perspectives on HIV and AIDS".
law review headlines
The January 2004 issue of the Columbia Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Celebration of the Tenth Anniversary of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's Appointment to the Supreme Court of the United States. It also has Carolyn J. Frantz and Hanoch Dagan, Properties of Marriage.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Duquesne Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled President Truman and the Steel Seizure Case.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Duquesne Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled President Truman and the Steel Seizure Case.
Wednesday, January 28, 2004
caught up
A journal that has caught up:
- Nova Law Review (Fall 2003 issue came out in January 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in September 2003, and Winter 2002 issue came out in August 2003)
catching up
A journal that is catching up:
- Journal of Southern Legal History (2003 issues came out in January 2004 and 2002 issues came out in August 2003)
off schedule
A journal that is running behind:
- Case Western Journal of International Law (Fall 2002 issue came out in January 2004)
law review headlines
The Winter 2003 issue of the American Bankruptcy Institute Law Review has Nathalie Martin, Common-Law Bankruptcy Systems: Similarities and Differences.
The latest issue of the American Indian Law Review has Kevin Noble Maillard, Parental Ratification: Legal Manifestations of Cultural Authenticity in Cross-Racial Adoption.
The Fall 2002 issue of the Case Western Journal of International Law has articles on International Crimes Against Women.
The December 2003 issue of the Fordham International Law Journal has articles focusing on Islam and the Law: Contemporary Views and Perspectives.
The Fall 2003 issue of Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society has articles on Culture and Entrepreneurship.
The most recent issue of the Kentucky Law Journal has articles on The Future of Affirmative Action: Gratz and Grutter in Context.
The Fall 2003 issue of the St. John's Law Review has articles on The Intersection of Race, Corporate Law, and Economic Development.
The December 2003 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has Margo A. Bagley, Patent First, Ask Questions Later: Morality and Biotechnology in Patent Law.
The latest issue of the American Indian Law Review has Kevin Noble Maillard, Parental Ratification: Legal Manifestations of Cultural Authenticity in Cross-Racial Adoption.
The Fall 2002 issue of the Case Western Journal of International Law has articles on International Crimes Against Women.
The December 2003 issue of the Fordham International Law Journal has articles focusing on Islam and the Law: Contemporary Views and Perspectives.
The Fall 2003 issue of Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society has articles on Culture and Entrepreneurship.
The most recent issue of the Kentucky Law Journal has articles on The Future of Affirmative Action: Gratz and Grutter in Context.
The Fall 2003 issue of the St. John's Law Review has articles on The Intersection of Race, Corporate Law, and Economic Development.
The December 2003 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has Margo A. Bagley, Patent First, Ask Questions Later: Morality and Biotechnology in Patent Law.
Monday, January 26, 2004
caught up
A journal that has caught up:
- Journal of Law and Economics (October 2004 issue came out in January 2004, April 2003 issue came out in August 2003, and October 2002 issue came out in July 2003)
Sunday, January 25, 2004
law review headlines
The Fall 2003 issue of the International Lawyer has articles from a symposium entitled The United States, the Doha Round and the WTO--Where Do We Go from Here?
The Winter 2003 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles from a symposium on international public health law.
The Summer 2003 issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review has articles focusing on International Extradition.
The Fall 2003 issue of the San Diego Law Review has articles from a symposium on Baselines and Counterfactuals in the Theory of Compensatory Damages: What Do Compensatory Damages Compensate?
The Winter 2003 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles from a symposium on international public health law.
The Summer 2003 issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review has articles focusing on International Extradition.
The Fall 2003 issue of the San Diego Law Review has articles from a symposium on Baselines and Counterfactuals in the Theory of Compensatory Damages: What Do Compensatory Damages Compensate?
Friday, January 23, 2004
off schedule
A journal that seems to be running late:
A journal that still seems to be running late:
- UCLA Pacific Basin Law Journal (Fall 2002 issue came out in January 2004)
A journal that still seems to be running late:
- Texas Journal of Women and the Law (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004 and Fall 2002 issue came out in September 2003)
law review headlines
The Fall 2003 issue of the Buffalo Law Review has articles from a symposium on Antitrust Law.
The Spring 2003 issue of the Texas Journal of Women and the Law has articles from a symposium entitled Subversive Legacies: Learning from History/Constructing the Future.
The most recent issue of the Widener Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled When a Lawyer Stood Tall: Sharing and Understanding Stories of Lawyer Heroes.
The Fall 2003 issue of the William and Mary Journal of Women and the Law has articles from a symposium entitled From Baby Blues to Mothers Who Kill: Responses to Postpartum Disorders in the Criminal and Civil Law.
The Spring 2003 issue of the Texas Journal of Women and the Law has articles from a symposium entitled Subversive Legacies: Learning from History/Constructing the Future.
The most recent issue of the Widener Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled When a Lawyer Stood Tall: Sharing and Understanding Stories of Lawyer Heroes.
The Fall 2003 issue of the William and Mary Journal of Women and the Law has articles from a symposium entitled From Baby Blues to Mothers Who Kill: Responses to Postpartum Disorders in the Criminal and Civil Law.
Thursday, January 22, 2004
off schedule
A journal that seems to be running late:
- Journal of Law and Politics (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004)
law review headlines
The January 2004 issue of the Journal of Conflict Resolution has articles on The Poliheuristic Theory of Foreign Policy Decision Making.
The Spring 2003 issue of the Journal of Law and Politics has Stephen E. Gottlieb and David Schultz, The Empirical Basis of First Amendment Principles.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles on the 2002-2003 Supreme Court Review.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law has Richard A. Rinkema, Comment, Environmental Agreements, Non-State Actors, and the Kyoto Protocol: A "Third Way" for International Climate Action?
The Spring 2003 issue of the Journal of Law and Politics has Stephen E. Gottlieb and David Schultz, The Empirical Basis of First Amendment Principles.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles on the 2002-2003 Supreme Court Review.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law has Richard A. Rinkema, Comment, Environmental Agreements, Non-State Actors, and the Kyoto Protocol: A "Third Way" for International Climate Action?
Wednesday, January 21, 2004
off schedule
Journals that seem to be running late:
A journal that still seems to be running late:
- University of San Francisco Maritime Law Journal (the last issue of its 2002-2003 issue came out in January 2004)
- UCLA Women’s Law Journal (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004)
A journal that still seems to be running late:
- Hastings West-Northwest Journal of Environmental Law and Policy (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004, and Fall 2002 issue came out in August 2003)
Tuesday, January 20, 2004
call for papers
American Quarterly, the journal of the American Studies Association, will publish a law-related special issue: Legal Borderlands: Law and the Construction of American Borders, edited by Mary L. Dudziak, USC Law School, and Leti Volpp, American University Law School.
This special issue of American Quarterly will focus broadly on the role of law in the construction of the borders of the United States. We seek essays that take up an important question raised by the global turn in American Studies scholarship. Once we look at the United States in a global context, once territory – formerly the implicit boundary around American Studies – recedes in importance to American Studies scholarship, it becomes important to ask what the frame is around “American” Studies, and to ask how, in a global context, U.S. borders and identities are constructed. Law is one window through which to take up the question of the construction of U.S. borders, including the dividing lines between American identities and the boundaries (or lack of boundaries) around American global power. For this issue, a “border” is not simply a territorial boundary. Borders are constructed in law, not only through formal legal controls of entry and exit, but also through the construction of rights of citizenship and non-citizenship, and through the regulation (or legitimation) of American power in other parts of the world. Where legal rights are at issue, borders and territory continue to play a powerful role, especially as certain spaces (i.e. Guantanamo) are marked by the U.S. government as outside legal restraints on government power. Yet the law also extends the United States beyond its literal borders, through, for example, projects to export democracy and the rule of law.
Please send essays to American Quarterly by September 1, 2004 (american.quarterly@usc.edu). Essays should be no longer than 12,000 words, including notes. Inquiries about the special issue can be directed to: Mary Dudziak at mdudziak@law.usc.edu or Leti Volpp at lvolpp@wcl.american.edu.
The postal address for the journal is:
AMERICAN QUARTERLY
Center for American Studies and Ethnicity
3470 Trousdale Parkway
WPH 303
University of Southern California
Los Angeles, CA 90089-4033
Mary L. Dudziak
Judge Edward J. and Ruey L. Guirado Professor of Law and History
University of Southern California Law School
University Park
Los Angeles, CA 90089-0071
phone: 213.740.4789
fax: 213.740.5502
mdudziak@law.usc.edu
http://lawweb.usc.edu/faculty/mdudziak.htm
law review headlines
The most recent issue of the Columbia Business Law Review has Sarah Helene Duggin, Internal Corporate Investigations: Legal Ethics, Professionalism and the Employee Interview.
The November 2003 issue of the George Washington Law Review has Geoffrey P. Miller, Norm Enforcement in the Public Sphere: The Case of Handicapped Parking; Nicole Stelle Garnett, The Public-Use Question as a Takings Problem; and Kent Greenfield and Peter C. Kostant, An Experimental Test of Fairness Under Agency and Profit-Maximization Constraints (With Notes on Implications for
Corporate Governance).
The Fall 2003 issue of Jurimetrics has articles from a symposium entitled Confidence-building Measures for Genetically Modified Foods.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Juvenile and Family Court Journal has articles on Family Violence.
The 2003 issue of the University of Chicago Legal Forum has articles on Current Issues In Class Action Litigation.
The most recent issue of the University of Illinois Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Ethics 2000 and Beyond: Reform or Professional Responsibility as Usual?
The November 2003 issue of the George Washington Law Review has Geoffrey P. Miller, Norm Enforcement in the Public Sphere: The Case of Handicapped Parking; Nicole Stelle Garnett, The Public-Use Question as a Takings Problem; and Kent Greenfield and Peter C. Kostant, An Experimental Test of Fairness Under Agency and Profit-Maximization Constraints (With Notes on Implications for
Corporate Governance).
The Fall 2003 issue of Jurimetrics has articles from a symposium entitled Confidence-building Measures for Genetically Modified Foods.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Juvenile and Family Court Journal has articles on Family Violence.
The 2003 issue of the University of Chicago Legal Forum has articles on Current Issues In Class Action Litigation.
The most recent issue of the University of Illinois Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Ethics 2000 and Beyond: Reform or Professional Responsibility as Usual?
Thursday, January 15, 2004
hiatus
I will be traveling from January 15 to January 20, so there will be no updates to the law review headlines and late list features till I return. Take care!
Wednesday, January 14, 2004
off schedule
A journal that is running late:
Journal that still appear to be running late:
- University of Baltimore Intellectual Property Law Journal (Spring 2001 issue came out in January 2004)
Journal that still appear to be running late:
- The Catholic Lawyer (Fall 2002 issue came out in January 2004 and Summer 2002 issue came out in November 2003)
- The ICSID Review (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004 and Fall 2002 issue just came out in July 2003)
law review headlines
The most recent issue of the Antitrust Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Antitrust Issues in the Pharmaceutical Industry.
The Summer 2003 issue of the Catholic University Law Review has articles from a symposium on the Life and Work of Justice Byron R. White.
The December 2003 issue of the Columbia Law Review has Henry Paul Monaghan, Supreme Court Review of State-court Determinations of State Law in Constitutional Cases; and Norman W. Spaulding, Constitution as Countermonument: Federalism, Reconstruction, and the Problem of Collective Memory.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Connecticut Law Review has Carol Necole Brown, Taking the Takings Claim: a Policy and Economic Analysis of the Survival of Takings Claims after Property Transfers, and Terrence R. Chorvat, Perception and Income: the Behavioral Economics of the Realization Doctrine.
The December 2003 issue of the Fordham Law Review has Rebecca S. Eisenberg, Patents, Product Exclusivity, and Information Dissemination: How Law Directs Biopharmaceutical Research and Development.
The most recent issue of the Houston Journal of Health Law and Policy has articles from a symposium on Federalism in Health Care.
The October 2003 issue of the Iowa Law Review has William W. Buzbee, Recognizing the Regulatory Commons: a Theory of Regulatory Gaps.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law has Holly Doremus, Takings and Transitions; and Jeffrey H. Wood, Recalibrating the Federal Government's Authority to Regulate Intrastate Endangered Species After SWANCC .
The Spring 2003 issue of the New Mexico Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Beyond Atkins: A Symposium on the Implications of Atkins v. Virginia.
The December 2003 issue of the New York University Law Review has Sunish Gulati, Note, The Use of Gender-loaded Identities in Sex-stereotyping Jurisprudence.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Northwestern University Law Review has Christopher Slobogin, A Jurisprudence of Dangerousness.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law (an inaugural issue!) has articles from a symposium entitled Reflections on the Criminal Justice System after September 11, 2001.
The most recent issue of the Santa Clara Law Review has Daniel S. Jacobs, The Role of the Federal Government in Defending Public Interest Litigation.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review has Cass R. Sunstein and Richard H. Thaler, Libertarian Paternalism Is Not an Oxymoron; Russell Korobkin, Bounded Rationality, Standard Form Contracts, and Unconscionability; Larry Alexander and Saikrishna Prakash, Reports of the Nondelegation Doctrine's Death Are Greatly Exaggerated; Eric A. Posner and Adrian Vermeule, Nondelegation: A Post-mortem; Richard W. Parker (who, ooh, published an article in the journal I worked on in law school), Grading the Government; Philip Bridwell, Comment, The Philosophical Dimensions of the Doctrine of Unconscionability; and Sarah C. Rispin, Comment, Cooperative Federalism and Constructive Waiver of State Sovereign Immunity.
The November 2003 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Jon Hanson and David Yosifon, The Situation: An Introduction to the Situational Character, Critical Realism, Power Economics, and Deep Capture.
The Fall 2003 issue of the William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review has articles from a symposium entitled Pesticides: What Will the Future Reap?
The Summer 2003 issue of the Catholic University Law Review has articles from a symposium on the Life and Work of Justice Byron R. White.
The December 2003 issue of the Columbia Law Review has Henry Paul Monaghan, Supreme Court Review of State-court Determinations of State Law in Constitutional Cases; and Norman W. Spaulding, Constitution as Countermonument: Federalism, Reconstruction, and the Problem of Collective Memory.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Connecticut Law Review has Carol Necole Brown, Taking the Takings Claim: a Policy and Economic Analysis of the Survival of Takings Claims after Property Transfers, and Terrence R. Chorvat, Perception and Income: the Behavioral Economics of the Realization Doctrine.
The December 2003 issue of the Fordham Law Review has Rebecca S. Eisenberg, Patents, Product Exclusivity, and Information Dissemination: How Law Directs Biopharmaceutical Research and Development.
The most recent issue of the Houston Journal of Health Law and Policy has articles from a symposium on Federalism in Health Care.
The October 2003 issue of the Iowa Law Review has William W. Buzbee, Recognizing the Regulatory Commons: a Theory of Regulatory Gaps.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law has Holly Doremus, Takings and Transitions; and Jeffrey H. Wood, Recalibrating the Federal Government's Authority to Regulate Intrastate Endangered Species After SWANCC .
The Spring 2003 issue of the New Mexico Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Beyond Atkins: A Symposium on the Implications of Atkins v. Virginia.
The December 2003 issue of the New York University Law Review has Sunish Gulati, Note, The Use of Gender-loaded Identities in Sex-stereotyping Jurisprudence.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Northwestern University Law Review has Christopher Slobogin, A Jurisprudence of Dangerousness.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law (an inaugural issue!) has articles from a symposium entitled Reflections on the Criminal Justice System after September 11, 2001.
The most recent issue of the Santa Clara Law Review has Daniel S. Jacobs, The Role of the Federal Government in Defending Public Interest Litigation.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review has Cass R. Sunstein and Richard H. Thaler, Libertarian Paternalism Is Not an Oxymoron; Russell Korobkin, Bounded Rationality, Standard Form Contracts, and Unconscionability; Larry Alexander and Saikrishna Prakash, Reports of the Nondelegation Doctrine's Death Are Greatly Exaggerated; Eric A. Posner and Adrian Vermeule, Nondelegation: A Post-mortem; Richard W. Parker (who, ooh, published an article in the journal I worked on in law school), Grading the Government; Philip Bridwell, Comment, The Philosophical Dimensions of the Doctrine of Unconscionability; and Sarah C. Rispin, Comment, Cooperative Federalism and Constructive Waiver of State Sovereign Immunity.
The November 2003 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Jon Hanson and David Yosifon, The Situation: An Introduction to the Situational Character, Critical Realism, Power Economics, and Deep Capture.
The Fall 2003 issue of the William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review has articles from a symposium entitled Pesticides: What Will the Future Reap?
Friday, January 09, 2004
caught up
A journal that has caught up:
Congrats!
- University of Cincinnati Law Review (Fall 2003 issue came out in January 2004, Summer 2003 issue came out in December 2003, Spring 2003 issue came out in October 2003, Winter 2002 issue came out in August 2003)
Congrats!
law review headlines
The Fall 2003 issue of the Administrative Law Review has Cary Coglianese, Jennifer Nash, Todd Olmstead, Performance-Based Regulation: Prospects and Limitations in Health, Safety, and Environmental Protection.
The December 2003 issue of the Boston University Law Review has Eric L. Muller, Constitutional Conscience.
The December 2003 issue of the California Law Review has Frank B. Cross, Decisionmaking in the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals; Hanoch Dagan, The Craft of Property; Melvin A. Eisenberg, Mistake in Contract Law; and Melvin A. Eisenberg, Disclosure in Contract Law.
The Fall 2003 issue of Environmental Law has Marc R. Poirier, The NAFTA Chapter 11 Expropriation Debate Through the Eyes of a Property Theorist.
The most recent issue of the Idaho Law Review has Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Looking Beyond Our Borders: the Value of a Comparative Perspective in Constitutional Adjudication; and Henry A. Span, Public Choice Theory and the Political Utility of the Takings Clause.
The December 2003 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has Martha M. Ertman, What's Wrong with a Parenthood Market? A New and Improved Theory of Commodification; Richard A. Rosen, Innocence and Death; and Thomas Zick, Constitutional Empiricism: Quasi-neutral Principles and Constitutional Truths.
The Fall 2003 issue of the South Texas Law Review has articles from a symposium on Asbestos Litigation.
The November 2003 issue of the Stanford Law Review has Einer Elhauge, Defining Better Monopolization Standards; Daryl J. Levinson, Collective Sanctions; and Jenny S. Martinez, Towards an International Judicial System.
The October 2003 issue of the UCLA Law Review has Mario J. Rizzo and Douglas Glen Whitman, The Camel's Nose Is in the Tent: Rules, Theories, and Slippery Slopes.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Virginia Journal of International Law has articles from the The New York University-University of Virginia Conference on Exploring the Limits of International Law.
The Winter 2003 issue of the Wake Forest Law Review has Randall P. Bezanson, Speaking Through Others' Voices: Authorship, Originality, and Free Speech.
The December 2003 issue of the Yale Law Journal has Alan Schwartz and Robert E. Scott, Contract Theory and the Limits of Contract Law.
The December 2003 issue of the Boston University Law Review has Eric L. Muller, Constitutional Conscience.
The December 2003 issue of the California Law Review has Frank B. Cross, Decisionmaking in the U.S. Circuit Courts of Appeals; Hanoch Dagan, The Craft of Property; Melvin A. Eisenberg, Mistake in Contract Law; and Melvin A. Eisenberg, Disclosure in Contract Law.
The Fall 2003 issue of Environmental Law has Marc R. Poirier, The NAFTA Chapter 11 Expropriation Debate Through the Eyes of a Property Theorist.
The most recent issue of the Idaho Law Review has Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Looking Beyond Our Borders: the Value of a Comparative Perspective in Constitutional Adjudication; and Henry A. Span, Public Choice Theory and the Political Utility of the Takings Clause.
The December 2003 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has Martha M. Ertman, What's Wrong with a Parenthood Market? A New and Improved Theory of Commodification; Richard A. Rosen, Innocence and Death; and Thomas Zick, Constitutional Empiricism: Quasi-neutral Principles and Constitutional Truths.
The Fall 2003 issue of the South Texas Law Review has articles from a symposium on Asbestos Litigation.
The November 2003 issue of the Stanford Law Review has Einer Elhauge, Defining Better Monopolization Standards; Daryl J. Levinson, Collective Sanctions; and Jenny S. Martinez, Towards an International Judicial System.
The October 2003 issue of the UCLA Law Review has Mario J. Rizzo and Douglas Glen Whitman, The Camel's Nose Is in the Tent: Rules, Theories, and Slippery Slopes.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Virginia Journal of International Law has articles from the The New York University-University of Virginia Conference on Exploring the Limits of International Law.
The Winter 2003 issue of the Wake Forest Law Review has Randall P. Bezanson, Speaking Through Others' Voices: Authorship, Originality, and Free Speech.
The December 2003 issue of the Yale Law Journal has Alan Schwartz and Robert E. Scott, Contract Theory and the Limits of Contract Law.
Thursday, January 08, 2004
Statutory Interpretation
The Blawg Review bloggers don't just read law review articles--sometimes they write them. For those of you interested in statutory interpretation, you might be interested in an article--entitled "Restatement (First) of Statutory Interpretation"--in which I argue that the American Law Institute should promulgate a Restatement of Statutory Interpretation. The article will appear in the NYU Journal of Legislation & Public Policy. The article and an abstract are posted on the Social Science Research Network. To view them click HERE. Comments are welcome. To submit comments, please e-mail me at statutes@hotmail.com."
Wednesday, January 07, 2004
catching up
A journal that appears to be catching up:
- Cleveland State Law Review (a 2002-03 issue came out in December 2003 and another 2002-03 issue came out in September 2003)
off schedule
A journal that appears to be running late:
Journals that appears to still be running late:
- Hastings International and Comparative Law Review (Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004)
Journals that appears to still be running late:
- American Journal of Legal History (April 2001 issue came out in January 2004, January 2001 issue came out in November 2003, and October 2000 issue came out in September 2003)
- University of Miami Law Review (April 2003 issue came out in January 2004 and January 2003 issue came out in September 2003)
law review headlines
The December 2003 issue of the American Economic Review has Daniel Kahneman, Maps of Bounded Rationality: Psychology for Behavioral Economics and William A. Brock and Anastasios Xepapadeas, Valuing Biodiversity from an Economic Perspective: A Unified Economic, Ecological, and Genetic Approach.
The August 2003 issue of the American University Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Quest for Equal Educational Opportunity: Brown Nears 50, San Antonio Turns 30.
The July 2003 issue of the Fordham Urban Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Beyond the Sentence: Post-Incarceration Legal, Social, and Economic Consequences of Criminal Convictions.
The April 2003 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has J.B. Ruhl and James Salzman, Mozart and the Red Queen: The Problem of Regulatory Accretion in the Administrative State.
The Spring 2003 issue of the Hastings International and Comparative Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Lex & the Lorax: Enforcing Environmental Norms under International Law.
The December 2003 issue of the Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law has articles focusing on Ideas in American Health Policy.
The most recent issue of the QLR (Quinnipiac Law Review) has articles from the Fifth Conference on Law and Philosophy: The Work of Herbert Morris.
The Spring 2003 issue of the University of the District of Columbia Law Review has articles focusing on Civil Rights in the 21st Century.
The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Memphis Law Review has articles from a symposium on Products Liability.
The April 2003 issue of the University of Miami Law Review has articles from a symposium called Beyond Right and Reason: Pierre Schlag, the Critique of Normativity, and the Enchantment of Reason.
The November 2003 issue of the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law has A. Mark Weisburd, American Judges and International Law.
The most recent issue of the Washington University Global Studies Law Review has Paul H. Brietzke, The Politics of Legal Reform.
The August 2003 issue of the American University Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Quest for Equal Educational Opportunity: Brown Nears 50, San Antonio Turns 30.
The July 2003 issue of the Fordham Urban Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Beyond the Sentence: Post-Incarceration Legal, Social, and Economic Consequences of Criminal Convictions.
The April 2003 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has J.B. Ruhl and James Salzman, Mozart and the Red Queen: The Problem of Regulatory Accretion in the Administrative State.
The Spring 2003 issue of the Hastings International and Comparative Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Lex & the Lorax: Enforcing Environmental Norms under International Law.
The December 2003 issue of the Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law has articles focusing on Ideas in American Health Policy.
The most recent issue of the QLR (Quinnipiac Law Review) has articles from the Fifth Conference on Law and Philosophy: The Work of Herbert Morris.
The Spring 2003 issue of the University of the District of Columbia Law Review has articles focusing on Civil Rights in the 21st Century.
The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Memphis Law Review has articles from a symposium on Products Liability.
The April 2003 issue of the University of Miami Law Review has articles from a symposium called Beyond Right and Reason: Pierre Schlag, the Critique of Normativity, and the Enchantment of Reason.
The November 2003 issue of the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law has A. Mark Weisburd, American Judges and International Law.
The most recent issue of the Washington University Global Studies Law Review has Paul H. Brietzke, The Politics of Legal Reform.
whew
The rest of the December issues have been entered. Now (gradually) onto the January issues.
University of Miami International & Comparative Law Review Call For Papers
The University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review is pleased to announce a call for papers for its upcoming issue on the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).
In November 2003, Miami, Florida will host a ministerial meeting of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). The purpose of the meeting is for the governments of North, South and Central America and the Caribbean to continue progress toward the negotiation of a Free Trade Areas of the Americas. The project to create a FTAA raises many complex and controversial issues and has sparked significant civil resistance by labor, peasants, environmentalists, students, small farmers and businesses in countries throughout the hemisphere.
The journal invites practitioners, scholars and students to submit papers that address the issues surrounding the creation of the FTAA.
Papers should utilize a recognized system of citation. Submissions should be mailed or emailed to the following address:
University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review
University of Miami School of Law
Attn: Articles Editor
P.O. Box 248087
Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA
UMICLR@students.law.miami.edu
The deadline for paper submission is January 15, 2004. Authors will be notified in writing if their papers are selected for publication. While the editors of the Review reserve the right to edit the paper prior to publication, any alterations made will be submitted to the author for final approval, at which time any updates may be submitted by the author. Publication of is tentatively scheduled for July 2004.
In November 2003, Miami, Florida will host a ministerial meeting of the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA). The purpose of the meeting is for the governments of North, South and Central America and the Caribbean to continue progress toward the negotiation of a Free Trade Areas of the Americas. The project to create a FTAA raises many complex and controversial issues and has sparked significant civil resistance by labor, peasants, environmentalists, students, small farmers and businesses in countries throughout the hemisphere.
The journal invites practitioners, scholars and students to submit papers that address the issues surrounding the creation of the FTAA.
Papers should utilize a recognized system of citation. Submissions should be mailed or emailed to the following address:
University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review
University of Miami School of Law
Attn: Articles Editor
P.O. Box 248087
Coral Gables, FL 33124 USA
UMICLR@students.law.miami.edu
The deadline for paper submission is January 15, 2004. Authors will be notified in writing if their papers are selected for publication. While the editors of the Review reserve the right to edit the paper prior to publication, any alterations made will be submitted to the author for final approval, at which time any updates may be submitted by the author. Publication of is tentatively scheduled for July 2004.
catching up
A journal that is catching up:
Journal that have caught up by skipping issues (I think):
- Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business (Winter 2003, Fall 2002, and Spring 2002 issues came out in December 2003)
Journal that have caught up by skipping issues (I think):
- Temple Law Review (Summer 2003 issue came out in December 2003, Winter 2002 issue came out in September 2003, and an in-between issue is still remaining)
- Whittier Law Review (Fall 2003 issue came out in December 2003 and the Winter 2002 issue came out in July 2003)
off schedule
Journals that appear to be running late:
Journals that have been and are still running late:
- Natural Resources Journal (Spring 2003 issue came out in December 2003)
- Ocean and Coastal Law Journal (2001 issue came out in December 2003)
- Women's Rights Law Reporter (Spring 2003 issue came out in December 2003)
Journals that have been and are still running late:
- Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law Journal (Winter 2003 issue came out in December 2003, Fall 2002 issue came out in July 2003, Summer 2002 issue came out in July 2003)
- Temple Environmental Law and Technology Journal (Spring 2003 issue came out in December 2003 and Fall 2002 issue came out in July 2003)
law review headlines
The most recent issue of the American University International Law Review has articles from a conference on Shaping Globalization.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Chicago Journal of International Law has articles on Reconciling Political Sanctions with Globalization and Free Trade and The Role of the Lawyer in War.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts has Paul S. Gutman, Say What?: Blogging and Employment Law in Conflict.
The most recent issue of the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law has Elyse M. Freeman, Note, Regulatory Expropriation under NAFTA Chapter 11: Some Lessons from the European Court of Human Rights.
The most recent issue of the Ecology Law Quarterly has its Annual Review of Environmental and
Natural Resources Law.
The most recent issue of the George Washington International Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The United States Court of Federal Claims 20th Anniversary Conference: Perspectives on Suing the Sovereign Here and Abroad.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Georgia Law Review has articles from a symposium on Jurisdiction to Tax in the New Economy: International, National, and Subnational Perspectives.
The Symposium 2003 issue of the Houston Law Review has articles from the Institute for Intellectual Property & Information Law Symposium entitled Considering Copyright.
The September 2003 issue of the Journal of Legal Education has articles On Empirical Research.
The Winter 2003 issue of the Marquette Law Review has Patrick H. Moran, Comment, The Federal and Ninth Circuits Square Off: Refusals to Deal And the Precarious Intersection Between Antitrust and Patent Law.
The most recent issue of Michigan Journal of Gender and Law has articles from a symposium entitled Marriage Law: Obsolete or Cutting Edge?
The December 2003 issue of the Minnesota Law Review has Edward K. Cheng, Changing Scientific Evidence.
The Spring 2002 issue of the Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business has articles from a symposium on International Economic Conflict and Resolution.
The most recent issue of the Ocean and Coastal Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled You Win Some, You Lose Some: The Costs and Benefits of Litigation in Fishery Management.
The most recent issue of the Ohio State Law Journal has Reza Dibadj, Regulatory Givings and the Anticommons.
The Fall 2003 issue of the South Carolina Law Review has Deborah A. Schmedemann, Beyond Words: an Empirical Study of Context in Contract Creation.
The Summer 2003 issue of the Temple Law Review has Laura Krugman Ray, Judging the Justices: a Supreme Court Performance Review.
The November 2003 issue of the U.C. Davis Law Review, published in conjunction with Environs, has articles from a symposium entitled Environmental Ethics and Policy: Bringing Philosophy down to Earth.
The most recent issue of the University of Colorado Law Review has articles from a symposium on Justice White and the Exercise of Judicial Power.
The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Hawai’i Law Review has articles focusing on Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. V. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review has articles focusing on Islam.
The November 2003 issue of the University of Pennsyvlania Journal of Constitutional Law has Randy E. Barnett, The Original Meaning of the Necessary and Proper Clause; Stephen M. Feldman, Religious Minorities and the First Amendment: The History, the Doctrine, and the Future; Seth F. Kreimer, Too Close to the Rack and the Screw: Constitutional Constraints on Torture in the War on Terror; Alan M. Dershowitz, Reply: Torture Without Visibility and Accountability Is Worse Than with It; Seth F. Kreimer, Surreply: Constitutional Principles and Collateral Damage.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Toledo Law Review has articles from the Leadership in Legal Education Symposium.
The most recent issue of the Wisconsin Law Review has Charles Davant IV, Sorcerer or Sorcerer's Apprentice?: Federal Agencies and the Creation of Individual Rights.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Chicago Journal of International Law has articles on Reconciling Political Sanctions with Globalization and Free Trade and The Role of the Lawyer in War.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts has Paul S. Gutman, Say What?: Blogging and Employment Law in Conflict.
The most recent issue of the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law has Elyse M. Freeman, Note, Regulatory Expropriation under NAFTA Chapter 11: Some Lessons from the European Court of Human Rights.
The most recent issue of the Ecology Law Quarterly has its Annual Review of Environmental and
Natural Resources Law.
The most recent issue of the George Washington International Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The United States Court of Federal Claims 20th Anniversary Conference: Perspectives on Suing the Sovereign Here and Abroad.
The Fall 2003 issue of the Georgia Law Review has articles from a symposium on Jurisdiction to Tax in the New Economy: International, National, and Subnational Perspectives.
The Symposium 2003 issue of the Houston Law Review has articles from the Institute for Intellectual Property & Information Law Symposium entitled Considering Copyright.
The September 2003 issue of the Journal of Legal Education has articles On Empirical Research.
The Winter 2003 issue of the Marquette Law Review has Patrick H. Moran, Comment, The Federal and Ninth Circuits Square Off: Refusals to Deal And the Precarious Intersection Between Antitrust and Patent Law.
The most recent issue of Michigan Journal of Gender and Law has articles from a symposium entitled Marriage Law: Obsolete or Cutting Edge?
The December 2003 issue of the Minnesota Law Review has Edward K. Cheng, Changing Scientific Evidence.
The Spring 2002 issue of the Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business has articles from a symposium on International Economic Conflict and Resolution.
The most recent issue of the Ocean and Coastal Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled You Win Some, You Lose Some: The Costs and Benefits of Litigation in Fishery Management.
The most recent issue of the Ohio State Law Journal has Reza Dibadj, Regulatory Givings and the Anticommons.
The Fall 2003 issue of the South Carolina Law Review has Deborah A. Schmedemann, Beyond Words: an Empirical Study of Context in Contract Creation.
The Summer 2003 issue of the Temple Law Review has Laura Krugman Ray, Judging the Justices: a Supreme Court Performance Review.
The November 2003 issue of the U.C. Davis Law Review, published in conjunction with Environs, has articles from a symposium entitled Environmental Ethics and Policy: Bringing Philosophy down to Earth.
The most recent issue of the University of Colorado Law Review has articles from a symposium on Justice White and the Exercise of Judicial Power.
The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Hawai’i Law Review has articles focusing on Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. V. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Miami International and Comparative Law Review has articles focusing on Islam.
The November 2003 issue of the University of Pennsyvlania Journal of Constitutional Law has Randy E. Barnett, The Original Meaning of the Necessary and Proper Clause; Stephen M. Feldman, Religious Minorities and the First Amendment: The History, the Doctrine, and the Future; Seth F. Kreimer, Too Close to the Rack and the Screw: Constitutional Constraints on Torture in the War on Terror; Alan M. Dershowitz, Reply: Torture Without Visibility and Accountability Is Worse Than with It; Seth F. Kreimer, Surreply: Constitutional Principles and Collateral Damage.
The Fall 2003 issue of the University of Toledo Law Review has articles from the Leadership in Legal Education Symposium.
The most recent issue of the Wisconsin Law Review has Charles Davant IV, Sorcerer or Sorcerer's Apprentice?: Federal Agencies and the Creation of Individual Rights.
back
The University of Texas This Month's Contents page is finally updated, and I will be entering in new articles very soon.