Wednesday, March 31, 2004

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journal that seem to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The December 2003 issue of the Cardozo Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Spinoza's Law.

The March 2004 issue of the Columbia Law Review has Thomas B. Nachbar, Intellectual Property and Constitutional Norms, and W. Bradley Wendel, Civil Disobedience.

The April 2004 issue of the Family Court Review has articles on Models of Collaboration in Family Law.

The Spring 2003 issue of the George Mason Law Review is a special Legislative Issue.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics has articles from a symposium on Legal Ethics in the Era of Corporate Scandal.

The most recent issue of the Indiana Law Review has Ronald C. Den Otter, The Place of Moral Judgment in Constitutional Interpretation.

The most recent issue of the Journal of Law and Policy has articles on Science for Judges I: Papers on Toxicology and Epidemiology.

The March 2004 issue of the Journal of Legal Medicine has articles from a symposium on the Delivery of Mental Health Service to Children and Adolescents.

The most recent issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles Entertainment Law Review has articles from the 2003 Stanford Law and Technology Association Conference: Ideas Without Boundaries: Creating and Protecting Intellectual Property in the International Arena.

The Fall 2003 issue of Margins has articles from a symposium on Title IX: Women, Athletics and the Law.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Southern Methodist University Law Review has Gregory Scott Crespi, The Influence of Two Decades of Contract Law Scholarship on Judicial Rulings: An Empirical Analysis.

The January 2004 issue of the Stanford Environmental Law Journal has Matthew C. Porterfield, International Expropriation Rules and Federalism.

The Spring 2003 issue of Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems has articles from a symposium on The African Union and the New Pan-Africanism: Rushing to Organize or Timely Shift.

The Winter 2003 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles on The Indian Trust Doctrine after the 2002-2003 Supreme Court Term.

The Spring/Summer 2003 issue of the UCLA Journal of International Law and Foreign Affairs has articles on Justice and Sovereignty: Implications of the International Criminal Court.

The March 2004 issue of the Virginia Law Review has Cass R. Sunstein, David Schkade, and Lisa Michelle Ellman, Essay, Ideological Voting on Federal Courts of Appeals: A Preliminary Investigation.

The February 2004 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has articles from the from the Institute of Bill of Rights Law Symposium: Property Rights and Economic Development.


Tuesday, March 23, 2004

hiatus 

The Blawg Review will be on hiatus until Steph returns next Wednesday from her vacation.

Monday, March 22, 2004

late list 

A journal that is still running late:

law review headlines 

The March 2004 issue of the California Law Review has Darryl K. Brown, Cost-benefit Analysis in Criminal Law; Adam B. Cox, Citizenship, Standing, and Immigration Law; and Margareth Etienne, The Declining Utility of the Right to Counsel in Federal Criminal Courts: An Empirical Study on the Diminished Role of Defense Attorney Advocacy Under the Sentencing Guidelines.

The Winter 2004 issue of the University of Colorado Law Review has Kevin M. Stack, The Divergence of Constitutional and Statutory Interpretation; and Richard Lavoie, Subverting the Rule of Law: The Judiciary's Role in Fostering Unethical Behavior.

The December 2003 issue of the University of Kansas Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Tax Compliance: Should Congress Reform the 1998 Reform Act.

The February 2004 issue of the Washington Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Technology, Values, and the Justice System.

Thursday, March 18, 2004

law review headlines 

The January 2004 issue of the California Law Review has F. Gregory Lastowka and Dan Hunter, The Laws of the Virtual Worlds; Gideon Parchomovsky and Peter Siegelman, Selling Mayberry: Communities and Individuals in Law and Economics; Kimberly A. Yuracko, Private Nurses and Playboy Bunnies: Explaining Permissible Sex Discrimination.

The December 2003 issue of Communications and the Law has F. Dennis Hale, Free Speech Rogues and Freaks: An Analysis of Amusing and Bizarre Litigants of Free Expression.

Wednesday, March 17, 2004

caught up 

A journal that has caught up (congrats!):

off schedule 

A journal that still seems to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The latest issue of the Chicago-Kent Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Do Children Have the Same First Amendment Rights as Adults?

The most recent issue of the Justice System Journal has Emery G. Lee III, Policy Windows on the U.S. Courts of Appeals.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review has Erwin Chemerinsky, The Myth of the Liberal Ninth Circuit.

Tuesday, March 16, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

law review headlines 

The March 2004 issue of the Harvard Law Review has articles from a symposium on Brown at Fifty.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Journal of Environmental Law and Litigation has Peter Jacques, Sharon Ridgeway, and Richard Witmer, Federal Indian Law and Environmental Policy: A Social Continuity of Violence; Joseph F. C. DiMento, Process, Norms, Compliance, and International Environmental Law; Jeffrey A. Berger, False Promises: NEPA's Role in Airport Expansions and the Streamlining of the Environmental Review Process; Erin Madden, Seeing the Science for the Trees: Employing Daubert Standards to Assess the Adequacy of National Forest Management Under the National Forest Management Act; and Tyson R. Smith, Shades of Green: Justice O'Connor and the Environment.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Washington and Lee Law Review has articles from a symposium on The Future of Medicare, Post Great Society and Post Plus-choice: Legal and Policy Issues.

Monday, March 15, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that is still off schedule:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of the Texas Journal of Business Law has Wayne Schiess, What Transactional Drafters Should Know about Plain English.

Friday, March 12, 2004

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of the Boston College International and Comparative Law Review has Gary Chartier, Peoples or Persons? Revising Rawls on Global Justice.

Thursday, March 11, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of the Public Contract Law Journal has articles on The Future of Competitive Sourcing.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Thomas Jefferson Law Review has articles from the 1st Annual Ruth Bader Ginsburg Lecture on Women and the Law Conference.

The March 2004 issue of the University of Richmond Law Review has articles from a symposium on the Independence of the Judiciary.

Wednesday, March 10, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

Journals that are still catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that still seem to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2004 issue of the Arizona Law Review has Carl H. Coleman, Rationalizing Risk Assessment in Human Subject Research.

The March 2004 issue of the Harvard Business Review has Ken Dychtwald, Tamara Erickson, and Bob Morison, It's Time to Retire Retirement; Marco lansiti and Roy Levien, Strategy as Ecology; and Saj-nicole A. Joni, The Geography of Trust.

The Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy has articles from a symposium entitled Law and Human Dignity: The Twenty-Second Annual National Student Federalist Society Symposium on Law and Public Policy.

The January 2004 issue of the Iowa Law Review has David Sloss, Constitutional Remedies for Statutory Violations; Tom Baker, Alon Harel, and Tamar Kugler, The Virtues of Uncertainty in Law: an Experimental Approach; Jim Chen, Webs of Life: Biodiversity Conservation as a Species of Information Policy.

What an empirical analysis fest! The January 2004 issue of the Journal of Legal Studies (Chicago) has Joni Hersch and W. Kip Viscusi, Punitive Damages: How Judges and Juries Perform; George Loewenstein and Don A. Moore, When Ignorance Is Bliss: Information Exchange and Inefficiency in Bargaining; Jeremy M. Grushcow, Measuring Secrecy: A Cost of the Patent System Revealed; Thomas J. Miles, Felon Disenfranchisement and Voter Turnout; Paul Pecorino and Mark Van Boening, An Empirical Analysis of Bargaining with Voluntary Transmission of Private Information; Robert Cooter and Ariel Porat, Decreasing-Liability Contracts; David A. Weisbach, Measurement and Tax Depreciation Policy: The Case of Short-Term Intangibles; Richard T. Boylan, Do the Sentencing Guidelines Influence the Retirement Decisions of Federal Judges?

The most recent issue of the Legal Studies Forum has Off the Record: An Anthology of Poetry By Lawyers.

The most recent issue of the New York University Environmental Law Journal has articles on New Approaches to Environmental Review.

The January 2004 issue of the Pepperdine Law Review has Henry F. Fradella, Lauren O’Neill, and Adam Fogarty, The Impact of Daubert on Forensic Science.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Rutgers Law Review has Lynne L. Dallas, Law and Socioeconomics in Legal Education.

The Fall 2003 issue of the St. Louis University Law Journal has articles on Race and Health Care.

The February 2004 issue of the Texas Law Review has Christopher R. Leslie, Trust, Distrust, and Antitrust.

The December 2003 issue of the Tulane Law Review has articles from the First Worldwide Congress on Mixed Jurisdictions Salience and Unity in the Mixed Jurisdiction Experience: Traits, Patterns, Culture, Commonalities.

The most recent issue of the Washington University Global Studies Law Review has articles on Chinese Anti-Monopoly Law.

The Winter 2004 issue of the William and Mary Environmental Law and Policy Review has more articles from a symposium entitled Pesticides: What Will the Future Reap?

Tuesday, March 02, 2004

law review headlines 

The Winter 2003 issue of the South Texas Law Review has articles from a symposium on Business Crimes.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Temple Environmental Law and Technology Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Apple v. Franklin, 20 Years Later.

Monday, March 01, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that is running behind:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2003 issue of the Antitrust Bulletin has articles from a symposium on Global Antitrust Law and Policy.

The most recent issue of the Columbia Journal of Transnational Law has John Y. Gotanda, Punitive Damages: A Comparative Analysis; and David H. Moore, Agency Costs in International Human Rights.

The June 2003 of the Georgetown Law Journal has James A. Gardner, State Constitutional Rights as Resistance to National Power: Toward a Functional Theory of State Constitutions.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Virginia Journal of International Law has Rachel Brewster, The Domestic Origins of International Agreements.

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?