Friday, February 27, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that is still off schedule:

Thursday, February 26, 2004

caught up 

A journal that has caught up (congrats!):

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the Kansas Journal of Law and Public Policy has articles on Tribal Law.

The Autumn 2003 issue of Law and Contemporary Problems has articles on Science in the Regulatory Process.

The Summer 2003 issue of Law and Policy in International Business has selected articles from a symposium on International Harmonization of Antitrust and Intellectual Property.

The most recent issue of the St. Louis University Public Law Review has articles from a symposium on Domestic Violence and the Law: Theory, Policy, and Practice.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Vermont Law Review has articles from a symposium on On Enron, Worldcom, and Their Aftermath.

Wednesday, February 25, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

A journal that is still catching up:

off schedule 

Journal that are off schedule:

Journals that are still off schedule:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the Georgetown International Environmental Law Review has David S. Caudill, Ibsen's an Enemy of the People and the Public Understanding of Science in Law; Alhaji B.M. Marong, From Rio to Johannesburg: Reflections on the Role of International Legal Norms in Sustainable Development; Todd B. Adams, Is There a Legal Future for Sustainable Development in Global Warming? Justice, Economics, and Protecting the Environment.

The 2002 issue of Graven Images: A Journal of Culture, Law, and the Sacred are devoted to the topic of On Interpretation: Studies in Culture, Law, and the Sacred.

The Winter 2004 issue of Law and Inequality: A Journal of Theory and Practice has Michael R. Siebecker, To Be or Not To Be ... Out in the Academy.

The Spring 2003 issue of the Louisiana Law Review focuses on Law and Affirmative Action.

The Fall 2003 issue of the North Carolina Journal of Law and Technology has 2003 Symposium on the Patriot Act, Consumer Privacy, and Cybercrime.

The second 2003 issue of the Villanova Environmental Law Journal has Leticia M. Diaz, Homeland Security, Pesticide Regulation and Common Household Chemicals: Are We Adequately Protecting All Our Sources.

Tuesday, February 24, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that is off schedule:

Journals that are still off schedule:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2002 issue of the Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal has articles on National Style in Labor Law and Social Science Scholarship.

The October 2003 issue of the Duke Law Journal has Mitchell N. Berman, Justification and Excuse, Law and Morality; and Donald E. Childress III, Note, Using Comparative Constitutional Law to Resolve Domestic Federal Questions.

The most recent issue of the Maryland Law Review has articles on Law and Intellectual Disabilities.

The June 2003 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Rosa Ehrenreich Brooks, The New Imperialism: Violence, Norms, and the "Rule of Law”; and Daniel P. Tokaji, First Amendment Equal Protection: on Discretion, Inequality, and Participation.

The Spring 2003 issue of the Oklahoma City University Law Review has articles from a symposium on The Use and Misuse of Forensic Evidence.

The Winter 2003 issue of the South Carolina Law Review has articles from the Professionalism Symposium.

Monday, February 23, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:Journals that are still catching up:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of the Annals of Health Law has Erin A. Egan, M.d., J.d., Kayhan Parsi, J.d., Ph.d., and Cynthia Ramirez, Comparing Ethics Education in Medicine and Law: Combining the Best Of Both Worlds.

The most recent issue of the Ecology Law Quarterly has Bradford C. Mank, The Murky Future of the Clean Water Act after SWANCC: Using a Hydrological Connection Approach to Saving the Clean Water Act.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Hastings International and Comparative Law Review has articles from the Symposium of the Japan Association of the Law of Civil Procedure: the Role of the Judge in the Development of Civil Litigation.

The December 2003 of the Hastings Law Journal has Ralph Nader and Alan Hirsch, A Proposed Right of Conscience for Government Attorneys; and Robin C. Feldman, The Insufficiency of Antitrust Analysis for Patent Misuse.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Penn State International Law Review has articles from its 11th Biennial Conference of the International Academy of Commercial and Consumer Law.

The December 2003 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has articles from a symposium on Corporate Control Transactions.

Thursday, February 19, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that appears to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2003 issue of the American Journal of Criminal Law has Peter Hack, The Roads Less Traveled: Post Conviction Relief Alternatives and the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Brooklyn Law Review has Oliver A. Houck, On the Limits of Charity: Lobbying, Litigation, and Electoral Politics by Charitable Organizations Under the Internal Revenue Code and Related Laws; William R. Corbett, The Need for a Revitalized Common Law of the Workplace; Brian D. Galle, Can Federal Agencies Authorize Private Suits Under Section 1983? A Theoretical Approach.

The most recent issue of the Journal of Dispute Resolution has articles from a symposium on Context and Conflict Resolution.

The most recent issue of the New York University Review of Law and Social Change has articles from a symposium on Changing Schools.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Texas Review of Law and Politics has articles from a symposium on the Legal, Economic, and Human Rights Implications of Civilian Firearms Ownership and Regulation.

The February 2004 issue of the U.C. Davis Law Review has Norman R. Williams, The Failings of Originalism: The Federal Courts and the Power of Precedent.

Wednesday, February 18, 2004

caught up 

A journal that has caught up:

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Journal of Legislation has Morell E. Mullins, Sr., Tools, Not Rules: The Heuristic Nature of Statutory Interpretation.

The most recent issue of the New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy has articles, comments, and speeches on Teaching Legislation: a Conversation.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Rutgers Law Journal has articles from their Fifteenth Annual Issue on State Constitutional Law.

The most recent issue of the Southwestern University Law Review has Elbert Lin, Identifying Asian America.

Tuesday, February 17, 2004

law review headlines 

The February 2004 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Charles F. Sabel and William H. Simon, Destabilization Rights: How Public Law Litigation Succeeds; and George G. Triantis, Organizations as Internal Capital Markets: the Legal Boundaries of Firms, Collateral, and Trusts in Commercial and Charitable Enterprises.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Journal of Appellate Practice and Process has articles focusing on Death-Penalty Appeals and Post-conviction Proceedings; it also has Arthur D. Hellman, Essay, Assessing Judgeship Needs in the Federal Courts of Appeals: Policy Choices and Process Concerns.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Michigan Journal of International Law has Charles H. Koch, Jr., Envisioning a Global Legal Culture.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Northern Illinois University Law Review has articles from a symposium on Domestic Violence and Victimizing the Victim: Relief, Results, Reform.

The Fall/Winter 2003 issue of the Seattle Journal for Social Justice has articles from a symposium entitled Civil Liberties Post-September 11.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Temple Law Review has Timothy F. Malloy, Regulation, Compliance and the Firm.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Texas Wesleyan Law Review has articles from a symposium on The Role of Contract in the Modern Employment Relationship.

Wednesday, February 11, 2004

catching up 

A journal that appears to be catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that appears to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the Berkeley Technology Law Journal has Robert A. Heverly, The Information Semicommons and R. Polk Wagner, Of Patents and Path Dependency: a Comment on Burk and Lemley.

The most recent issue of the Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review has Joel A. Mintz, Some Thoughts on the Merits of Pragmatism as a Guide to Environmental Protection, and Kyle W. La Londe, Who Wants to Be an Environmental Justice Advocate?: Options for Bringing an Environmental Justice Complaint in the Wake of Alexander v. Sandoval.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Boston College Third World Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Healing the Wounds of Slavery: Can Present Legal Remedies Cure Past Wrongs?

The Fall 2003 issue of the Brandeis Law Journal has Steven K. Berenson, The Duty Defined: Specific Obligations that Follow from Civil Government Lawyers' General Duty to Serve the Public Interest.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Natural Resources Journal has articles from How Big Do We Want to Get? A Symposium on Growth Management: Impacts and Options.

The Spring 2003 issue of the New York University Journal of International Law and Politics has Papers from the Center for International Studies at New York University School of Law.

Tuesday, February 10, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that still appears to be running late:

law review headlines 

The December 2003 issue of the Boston College Law Review has David S. Caudill and Lewis H. LaRue, Why Judges Applying the Daubert Trilogy Need to Know about the Social, Institutional, and Rhetorical—and Not Just the Methodological—Aspects of Science.

The Columbia Journal of Asian Law has Shubha Ghosh, Globalization, Patents, and Traditional Knowledge

The Fall 2003 issue of Law and Social Inquiry has articles from the Symposium on Violence Between Intimates, Globalization, and the State.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Loyola University Chicago Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Law, the Internet, and Cyberspace.

The Winter 2004 issue of Review of Litigation has Peter H. Huang, Lawsuit Abandonment Options in Possibly Frivolous Litigation Games.

Monday, February 09, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

Friday, February 06, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is still catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that is off schedule:

law review headlines 

The first 2003 issue of the Villanova Environmental Law Journal has William A. Wilcox, Jr., Special Issues in Environmental Law Involving Federal Agencies; and Daniel V. Madrid, Comment, Can the Environmental Justice Movement Survive Without Title VI of the Civil Rights Act?.

The 2003 issue of the Widener Law Review has articles dedicated to Environmental Citizen Suits at Thirtysomething: a Celebration and Summit. This is like a little virtual get-together for me, as it has articles from two professors I've worked with and one I've, uh, kind of litigated against: John D. Echeverria, Standing and Mootness Decisions in the Wake of Laidlaw; Hope Babcock, The Effect of the Supreme Court's Eleventh Amendment Jurisprudence on Environmental Citizen Suits: Gotcha!; and Adam Babich, The Wages of Sin: The Violator-Pays Rule For Environmental Citizen Suits.

Thursday, February 05, 2004

catching up 

A journal that appears to be catching up:

law review headlines 

The January 2004 issue of the Cornell Law Review has articles focusing on Enron.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Michigan State U.-Detroit College of Law Law Review has articles from the Fourth Annual Quello Communication Policy and Law Symposium.

Tuesday, February 03, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that appears to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the Family Law Quarterly has articles from a symposium on Unified Family Courts.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Marquette Sports Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Title IX at Thirty.

The most recent issue of the Ohio State Journal on Dispute Resolution has articles from a symposium on The Americanization of International Dispute Resolution.

Monday, February 02, 2004

law review headlines 

The October 2003 issue of the American University Law Review has Bruce G. Peabody and John D. Nugent, Toward a Unifying Theory of the Separation of Powers.

The Winter 2003 issue of the Conflict Resolution Quarterly has a Colloquoy on Recent Research in Environmental Disputes.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Military Law Review has articles from The Fourth Legal Assistance Symposium: Articles for the Legal Assistance Practitioner.

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