Friday, May 28, 2004

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of the Baylor law Review has Ron Beal, The APA and Rulemaking: Lack of Uniformity Within a Uniform System.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Journal of Land Use and Environmental Law has A. Dan Tarlock, Is There a There There in Environmental Law?.

The Spring 2004 issue of the West Virginia Law Review has articles from the Water Law Symposium: Water Issues in the Appalachian Region.

Thursday, May 27, 2004

law review headlines 

The Spring 2004 issue of the Arizona State Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Indian Tribes and the Federal Courts: the Overlooked Sovereigns in Federal Jurisdiction. It also has Margaret Meriwether Cordray and Richard Cordray, The Calendar of the Justices: How the Supreme Court's Timing Affects Its Decisionmaking.

The May 2004 issue of the Columbia Law Review has James S. Liebman and Brandon L. Garrett, Madisonian Equal Protection; and Richard A. Primus, Bolling Alone.

The April 2004 issue of the Creighton Law Review has articles on The United States Supreme Court and Federal Law.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Ohio State Journal of Criminal Law has articles from a symposium entitled The Criminal Law and Policing Corporate Conduct.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles from the Legal Scholarship Symposium: The Scholarship of Frank I. Michelman.

The most recent issue of the Widener Law Review has articles from a symposium on Environmental Citizen Suits at Thirtysomething: A Celebration and Summit.

Wednesday, May 26, 2004

caught up 

A law journal that has caught up (congrats!):
  • Georgetown Immigration Law Journal (Winter 2004 and Fall 2003 issues came out in May 2004, Summer 2003 issue came out in February 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in December 2003, and Winter 2003 issue came out in October 2003)

off schedule 

A journal that still appears to be running late:
  • The Journal of East European Law (third issue of 2002-2003 year came out in May 2004, second issue of 2002-2003 year came out in March 2004 and first issue of the 2002-2003 year came out in November 2003)

law review headlines 

The latest issue of the Chicago-Kent Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Law and Economics and Legal Scholarship.

The most recent issue of the Journal of Law and Policy has articles on Science for Judges II: the Practice of Epidemiology and Administrative Agency Created Science.

The Spring 2004 issue of the St. John’s Journal of Legal Commentary has articles from a conference on Terrorism and its Impact on Insurance: Legislative Responses and Coverage Issues.

Tuesday, May 25, 2004

catching up 

Journal that are still catching up:

law review headlines 

The Summer 2003 issue of the DePaul Business and Commercial Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Mega-Bankruptcies: Representing Creditors and Debtors in Large Bankruptcies.

The May 2004 issue of the Minnesota Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Gay Rights after Lawrence V. Texas.

The Summer 2003 issue of the New York University Journal of International Law and Politics has Katharina Pistor and Chenggang Xu, Incomplete Law.

The Winter 2004 issue of the San Diego Law Review has articles from a symposium on Teaching Law and Socioeconomics.

The Spring 2003 issue of the has Thomas Jefferson Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Rounding Up Unusual Suspects: Human Rights in the Wake of 9/11.

The Spring 2004 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review has Adrian Vermeule, The Constitutional Law of Congressional Procedure; John F. Duffy, Rethinking the Prospect Theory of Patents; and Dan Simon, A Third View of the Black Box: Cognitive Coherence in Legal Decision Making.

Monday, May 24, 2004

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Boston College Environmental Affairs Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Coastal Wind Energy Generation: Conflicts and Capacities.

The March 2004 issue of Legal Theory has John F. Horty, The Result Model of Precedent.

Friday, May 21, 2004

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:
  • Touro Law Review (first 2004 and Summer 2003 issue came out in May 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in April 2004, Winter/Spring 2003 issue came out in October 2003, and Fall 2002 issue came out in July 2003)


  • Utah law Review (fourth 2003 issue came out in May 2004, third and second 2003 issues came out in March 2004, first 2003 issue came out in October 2003, and last 2002 issue came out in July 2003)


  • Villanova Environmental Law Journal (first issue of 2004 was published in May 2004, second issue of 2003 was published in February 2004, and the first issue of 2003 was published in January 2004)

law review headlines 

The final 2003 issue of the Utah Law Review has Reza Dibadj, Beyond Facile Assumptions and Radical Assertions: A Case for "Critical Legal Economics".

Thursday, May 20, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:
  • Georgetown Immigration Law Journal is catching up (Fall 2003 issue came out in May 2004, Summer 2003 issue came out in February 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in December 2003, and Winter 2003 issue came out in October 2003)

law review headlines 

The May 2004 issue of the Boston College Law Review has J.L. Hill, The Five Faces of Freedom in American Political and Constitutional Thought; and Note, The Copyrightability of Legal Complaints.

The most recent issue of the New York Law School Law Review has articles from the Center for Professional Values and Practice Symposium on Criminal Defense in the Age of Terrorism.

The latest issue issue of the Seton Hall Law Review has Lewis D. Lowenfels and Alan R. Bromberg, Implied Private Actions under Sarbanes-Oxley; Charles W. "Rocky" Rhodes, Clarifying General Jurisdiction; Ellen Byers, Corporations, Contracts, and the Misguiding Contradictions of Conservatism; and Jeffrey M. Hirsch, Can Congress Use its War Powers to Protect Military Employees from State Sovereign Immunity?

The most recent issue of the Stanford Law and Policy Review has articles from a symposium on Sports and the Law.

The most recent issue of the Virginia Environmental Law Journal has Katrina L. Fischer, Harnessing the Treaty Power in Support of Environmental Regulation of Activities That Don't "Substantially Affect Interstate Commerce": Recognizing the Realities of the New Federalism.

Wednesday, May 19, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that appears to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of Indiana Journal of Global Legal Studies has articles from a symposium on Globalization, Courts, and Judicial Power.

The October 2003 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Abraham Bell and Gideon Parchomovsky, Of Property and Antiproperty; and Dan M. Kahan, The Logic of Reciprocity: Trust, Collective Action, and Law.

The most recent issue of the Ohio State Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Public Policy for Retirement Security in the 21st Century.

Tuesday, May 18, 2004

catching up 

Journals that seem to be catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running late:

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Federal Circuit Bar Journal has Thomas Hitter, What Is So Special About the Federal Circuit? A Recommendation for ADR Use in the Federal Circuit.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Washington University Law Quarterly has Claire A. Hill, Regulating the Rating Agencies; and Heather S. Crall, Comment, Unreasonable Restraints: Antitrust Law and the National Residency Matching Program.

The Yale Journal of Law and the Humanities has Simon Stern, Book Review, What Authors Do.

Monday, May 17, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2003 issue of the Georgia State University Law Review has Scott Dodson, Vectoral Federalism.

The May 2004 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has articles from A Colloquium on the Jurisprudence of Mercy: Capital Punishment and Clemency.

Thursday, May 13, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that still appears to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2004 issue of the Indiana Law Journal has Hendrik Hartog, Lecture, Someday All this Will Be Yours: Inheritance, Adoption, and Obligation in Capitalist America.

The most recent issue of the Maryland Law Review has Kurt Eggert, Truth in Gaming: Toward Consumer Protection in the Gambling Industry; and John F. Hart, Fish, Dams, and James Madison: Eighteenth-Century Species Protection and the Original Understanding of the Takings Clause.

The Winter 2003 issue of the Tulane Environmental Law Journal has Peter M. Lavigne, The Movement for American Ecosystem Restoration and Interactive Environmental Decisionmaking: Quagmire, Diversion, or Our Last, Best Hope?; and Oliver A. Houck, Essay, Tales from a Troubled Marriage: Science and Law in Environmental Policy.

The April 2004 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Cary Coglianese and Gary E. Marchant, Shifting Sands: The Limits of Science in Setting Risk Standards. The May 2004 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Gregory Mitchell, Case Studies, Counterfactuals, and Causal Explanations.

The Winter 2004 issue of Urban Lawyer has Amnon Lehavi, Property Rights and Local Public Goods: Toward a Better Future for Urban Communities.

The May 2004 issue of the Virginia Law Review has Daniel Halberstam, Of Power and Responsibility: The Political Morality of Federal Systems.

Wednesday, May 12, 2004

Preempted! 

Earlier this week I was in the Sixth Circuit library browsing the current law reviews, and I came across Suzanne B. Goldberg, Equality Without Tiers, 77 S. Cal. L. Rev. 481 (March 2004). I haven't read it yet, but the article appears to be a critical examination of the Supreme Court's various levels of constitutional scrutiny from a legal historical perspective. This subject sounds extremely interesting to me, so I look forward to reading the article. At the same time, it really bums me out, because that was one of my big ideas for an article that I'd get to work on as soon as I became a professor. The title for my article would have been much less snazzy: "A Legal History of Judicial Scrutiny." Looks like I won't be mentioning that idea in any faculty job interviews. Still, I'm pleased that someone has finally addressed a subject that's long been on my mind. I hope that the article is good. Perhaps it will leave room for further research.

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of the Fordham Intellectual Property, Media, and Entertainment Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Sports.

The February 2004 issue of the Fordham International Law Journal has articles from a symposium called The Free Trade Area of the Americas: Issues and Visions for the Future.

The April 2004 issue of ICON: International Journal of Constitutional Law has articles from a symposium on Emergency Powers and Constitutionalism.

The most recent issue of the McGeorge Law Review has articles from A Conversation and Colloquia Concerning "Who Owns Your Digital Creations?".

The Winter 2004 issue of the Michigan Journal of International Law has Ana Maria Merico-Stephens, Of Federalism, Human Rights, and the Holland Caveat: Congressional Power to Implement Treaties; Maki Tanaka, Lessons from the Protracted Mox Plant Dispute: A Proposed Protocol on Marine Environmental Impact Assessment to the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea; William T. Pizzi and Mariangela Montagna, The Battle to Establish an Adversarial Trial System in Italy; and Joel M. Ngugi, Re-examining the Role of Private Property in Market Democracies: Problematic Ideological Issues Raised by Land Registration.

Tuesday, May 11, 2004

law review headlines 

The Spring 2004 issue of the Harvard Women’s Law Journal has Scott A. Moss, Women Choosing Diverse Workplaces: A Rational Preference with Disturbing Implications for Both Occupational Segregation and Economic Analysis of Law; Kim Brooks and Debra Parkes, Queering Legal Education: a Project of Theoretical Discovery.

The February 2004 issue of the Hastings Law Journal has Markus Dirk Dubber, Toward a Constitutional Law of Crime and Punishment; Craig M. Bradley, Federalism and the Federal Criminal Law; C. Douglas Floyd, The Limits of Minimal Diversity; Rosanna Cavallaro, Pride and Prejudice and Proof: Quotidian Factfinding and Rules of Evidence.

The Special Edition 2003 issue of the Mississippi Law Journal has articles from a symposium on The Permissibility of Race or Ethnicity as a Factor in Assessing the Reasonableness of a Search or Seizure.

Monday, May 10, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:
  • Quinnipiac Health Law Journal (2003-2004 issue came out in May 2004, 2002-2003 issue came out in October 2003, and 2002 issue came out in September 2003)

off schedule 

A law review that seems to be running late:

Thursday, May 06, 2004

law review headlines 

The Spring 2004 issue of the Harvard Negotiation Law Review has E. Patrick McDermott and Ruth Obar, "What's Going On" in Mediation: An Empirical Analysis of the Influence of a Mediator's Style on Party Satisfaction and Monetary Benefit.

Tuesday, May 04, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that appears to be running late:
  • St. Thomas Law Review (Summer 2003 issue came out in May 2004)

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Brigham Young University Law Review has Richard M. Hynes, Overoptimism and Overborrowing.

The March 2004 issue of the Iowa Law Review has Anthony J. Bellia Jr., Article III and the Cause of Action; Michael S. Kirsch, Alternative Sanctions and the Federal Tax Law: Symbols, Shaming, and Social Norm Management as a Substitute For Effective Tax Policy; and Jide Nzelibe, The Uniqueness of Foreign Affairs.

The April 2004 issue of the Journal of Health Politics, Policy, and Law has articles focusing on Insurance Coverage and the States.

The Summer 2003 issue of the St. Thomas Law Review has articles on Domestic Violence.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Whittier Law Review has William J. Michael, When Originalism Fails.

The April 2004 issue of the Yale Law Journal has James Q. Whitman, The Two Western Cultures of Privacy: Dignity Versus Liberty.

Monday, May 03, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:
  • Touro Law Review (Summer 2003 issue came out in May 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in April 2004, Winter/Spring 2003 issue came out in October 2003, and Fall 2002 issue came out in July 2003)

law review headlines 

The Winter 2003 issue of the DePaul Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled After Disaster: the September 11th Compensation Fund and the Future of Civil Justice.

The most recent issue of the Indiana International and Comparative Law Review has articles on A Separation of Powers Perspective on Pinochet.

The Summer 2003 issue of the Touro Law Review has articles on Lawyering and Its Discontents: Reclaiming Meaning in the Practice of Law.

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