Thursday, September 30, 2004

law review headlines 

The October 2004 issue of the Journal of Conflict Resolution has Matthew A. Baum, Going Private: Public Opinion, Presidential Rhetoric, and the Domestic Politics of Audience Cost in U.S. Foreign Policy Crises.

The Summer 2004 issue of the UMKC Law Review has C. Steven Bradford, The Cost of Regulatory Exemptions.

Wednesday, September 29, 2004

law review headlines 

The Summer 2004 issue of the Administrative Law Review has Matthew C. Stephenson, Mixed Signals: Reconsidering the Political Economy of Judicial Deference to Administrative Agencies.

The most recent issue of the Journal of Health Care Law and Policy has Barbara A. Noah, Bioethical Malpractice: Risk and Responsibility in Human Research.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Northwestern Journal of International Law and Business has articles from a symposium on European Competition Law.

The most recent issue of the Southwestern University Law Review has Andrea R. Tischler, Speaking for the Dead: A Call for Nationwide Coroner Reform.

Tuesday, September 28, 2004

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A journal that seems to be running late:

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The Summer 2004 issue of the Berkeley Technology Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Ideas into Action: Implementing Reform of the Patent System.

The Fall 2004 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles from a symposium on Employment-Based Health Coverage.

The most recent issue of the Thomas M. Cooley Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Order v. Liberty.

The Summer 2004 issue of Urban Lawyer has Jerry L. Anderson and Erin Sass, Is the Wheel Unbalanced? A Study of Bias on Zoning Boards.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Wisconsin International Law Journal has Ruth E. Gordon and Jon H. Sylvester, Deconstructing Development.

Monday, September 27, 2004

catching up 

A journal that seems to be catching up:

off schedule 

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law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Antitrust Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Integrating New Economic Learning with Antitrust Doctrine.

The most recent issue of the Chicago-Kent Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled "Law &": Philosophical, Psychological, Linguistic, and Biological Perspectives on Legal Scholarship.

The Special Edition 2004 issue of the Emory Law Journal has articles from the Conference on Sovereign Debt Restructuring: The View from the Legal Academy.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Hastings Constitutional Law Quarterly has Part II of articles from a symposium called Affirmative Action in the 21st Century: Reflections on Grutter v. Bollinger and Gratz v. Bollinger.

The most recent issue of the Journal of Art and Entertainment Law has a special edition on Art and War.

The October 2004 issue of the Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization has Oren Bar-Gill and Chaim Fershtman, Law and Preferences; Klaas J. Beniers and Otto H. Swank, On the Composition of Committees; Suzanne Scotchmer, The Political Economy of Intellectual Property Treaties, David C. Nixon, Separation of Powers and Appointee Ideology; Guy L. F. Holburn and Richard G. Vanden Bergh, Influencing Agencies Through Pivotal Political Institutions; and Rachelle C. Sampson, The Cost of Misaligned Governance in R&D Alliances.

The September 2004 issue of Justice Quarterly: JQ has Ronald Weitzer and Charis E. Kubrin, Breaking News: How Local TV News and Real-World Conditions Affect Fear of Crime.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Southern Illinois University Law Journal has articles from an Affirmative Action Symposium.

The most recent issue of the Western New England Law Review has articles from a symposium on State v. Oakley.

The most recent issue of the William Mitchell Law Review has articles from the Intellectual Property Symposium: The Impact of the United States Supreme Court on Intellectual Property this Millennium.

Thursday, September 23, 2004

catching up 

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law review headlines 

The May 2004 issue of the Iowa Law Review has Mitchell N. Berman, Guillen and Gullibility: Piercing the Surface of Commerce Clause Doctrine; Daniel M. Filler, Silence and the Racial Dimension of Megan’s Law; Robert Odawi Porter, The Inapplicability of American Law to the Indian Nations; and Tobias Barrington Wolff, Political Representation and Accountability Under Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.

The Summer 2004 issue of the Montana Law Review has Maxine D. Goodman, Reconstructing the Plain Language Rule of Statutory Construction: How and Why; Danna R. Jackson, Eighty Years of Indian Voting: A Call to Protect Indian Voting Rights; Edward L. Myers III, Disability and Technology; and James E. Dallner and D. Scott Manning, Death with Dignity in Montana.

The August 2004 issue of the UCLA Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Integration, Difference, and Citizenship: Celebrating 50 Years of the UCLA Law Review.

The most recent issue of the Albany Law Review has perspectives on Judicial Elections Versus Merit Selection.

The Winter 2004 issue of the American Bankruptcy Law Journal has Rhett G. Campbell, Energy Future and Forward Contracts, Safe Harbors and the Bankruptcy Code; Thomas C. Baxter, Jr., Joyce M. Hansen, and Joseph H. Sommer, Two Cheers for Territoriality: An Essay on International Bank Insolvency Law; and Georgene Vairo, Mass Torts Bankruptcies: The Who, The Why and The How.

The Summer 2004 issue of the FDCC Quarterly has Linda S. Woolf, Non-Competition Agreements.

The most recent issue of the Suffolk University Law Review has Harlan M. Goulett, God Hath Created the Mind Free: Toward a Jeffersonian Theory of Rights; Charles I. Kingson, How Tax Thinks; and Joanne Irene Gabrynowicz, Space Law: Its Cold War Origins and Challenges in the Era of Globalization.

Thursday, September 09, 2004

law review headlines 

The Winter 2004 issue of American Criminal Law Review has articles from a symposium on Gideon and Niki Kuckes, The Useful, Dangerous Fiction of Grand Jury Independence.

The January 2004 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has Sean D. Murphy, Assessing the Legality of Invading Iraq; Gabriel J. Chin, Reconstruction, Felon Disenfranchisement, and the Right to Vote: Did the Fifteenth Amendment Repeal Section 2 of the Fourteenth Amendment?; and Jonathan R. Siegel, Zone of Interests.

The June 2004 issue of the Journal of Human Rights has A Special Issue on World Civility.

The April 2004 issue of the Vanderbilt Law Review has Michael M. O'Hear, Federalism and Drug Control; Nancy J. King and Rosevelt L. Noble, Felony Jury Sentencing in Practice: A Three-State Study; and Gaia Bernstein, Accommodating Technological Innovation: Identity, Genetic Testing and the Internet.

The most recent issue of the Widener Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled The Right to Marry: Making the Case to Go Forward.

Wednesday, September 08, 2004

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

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The Winter 2003-2004 issue of Constitutional Commentary has Allan Ides, The Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 2003 and the Commerce Clause; Calvin H. Johnson, Homage to Clio: The Historical Continuity from the Articles of Confederation into the Constitution; William Ty Mayton, Recess Appointments and an Independent Judiciary; and Paul H. Edelman, The Dimension of the Supreme Court.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Fordham Intellectual Property, Media, and Entertainment Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Trademark Dilution, Copyright Violators, and Counterfeiting and Piracy.

The March 2004 issue of the Journal of Human Rights has articles from a symposium on Literary Theory and Human Rights: Classical and Contemporary Perspectives.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Penn State International Law Review has articles from its Symposium on Developing Mechanisms to Enhance Internationalization of Legal Education.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Tennessee Law Review has Steven L. Chanenson, Get the Facts, Jack! Empirical Research and the Changing Constitutional Landscape of Consent Searches.

The most recent issue of the Transnational Lawyer has articles from a symposium entitled Bordering on Terror: Global Business in Times of Terror – The Legal Issues.

The Spring 2004 issue of the United States-Mexico Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Current Issues in United States-Mexico Law and Society.

Tuesday, September 07, 2004

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

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law review headlines 

The Fall 2002/Spring 2003 issue of the Journal of Medicine and Law has discussions from a symposium entitled Controlled Substance Laws: Are They Meeting The Health Needs of the Public?

Friday, September 03, 2004

catching up 

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law review headlines 

The Summer 2004 issue of the Case Western Reserve Law Review has articles from Nike v. Kasky and the Modern Commercial Speech Doctrine.

The March 2004 issue of the Fordham Urban Law Journal has articles from the Urban Law Journal Special Series: the Current State of Abortion Law and Reproductive Rights.

The Summer 2004 issue of the Georgia State University Law Review has articles on Rethinking the Licensing of New Attorneys--An Exploration of Alternatives to the Bar Exam.

The latest issue of IDEA: the Journal of Law and Technology has Thomas G. Field, Jr., Judicial Review of Copyright Examination.

The December 2003 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Merritt B. Fox, Randall Morck, Bernard Yeung, and Artyom Durnev, Law, Share Price Accuracy, and Economic Performance: The New Evidence; Stephen Gardbaum, The "Horizontal Effect" of Constitutional Rights; and Jennifer K. Robbennolt, Apologies and Legal Settlement: An Empirical Examination.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Nevada Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Guinn v. Legislature of Nevada.

The June 2004 issue of the Tulane Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled From Brown to Grutter: Affirmative Action and Higher Education in the South.

Thursday, September 02, 2004

off schedule 

Journals that appear off schedule:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the Barry Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Civil Rights: Looking Back--Looking Forward.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Case Western Reserve Law Review has articles from The Law, Technology and the Arts Symposium: The Past, Present and Future of the Federal Circuit.

The Winter 2003 issue of the Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal has articles on Monitoring International Labor Standards.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Duke Journal of Gender Law and Policy has articles from a symposium entitled Queer Theory, Feminism, and the Law.

The Spring 2004 issue of Environmental Law has articles from a symposium entitled The Endangered Species Act Turns 30, including Michael C. Blumm and George Kimbrell, Flies, Spiders, Toads, Wolves, and the Constitutionality of the Endangered Species Act's Take Provision; and Holly Doremus, The Purposes, Effects, and Future of the Endangered Species Act's Best Available Science Mandate.

The Spring 2004 Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy has articles From the Federalist Society National Lawyer's Conference--2003.

The most recent issue of the Law and Society Review has articles from a symposium on Constitutional Ethnography.

The Summer 2004 issue of the Michigan State U.-Detroit College of Law Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled In the Wake of Corporate Reform: One Year in the Life of Sarbanes-Oxley -- A Critical Review.

The September 2004 issue of Social and Legal Studies is a special issue on Out of Conflict: Peace, Transition and Justice.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal has Justin D. Levinson and Kaiping Peng, Different Torts for Different Cohorts: A Cultural Psychological Critique Of Tort Law's Actual Cause and Foreseeability Inquiries; Donald J. Smythe, Bounded Rationality, the Doctrine of Impracticability, and the Governance of Relational Contracts; and Jay Weiser, The Real Estate Covenant as Commons: Incomplete Contract Remedies Over Time.

The Summer 2004 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review has Michael Abramowicz, Information Markets, Administrative Decisionmaking, and Predictive Cost-Benefit Analysis; and Robert W. Hahn, The Economic Analysis of Regulation: A Response to the Critics.

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