Sunday, October 31, 2004

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running late:

Wednesday, October 27, 2004

catching up 

Journal that are catching up:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the George Mason Law Review is a has articles on Antitrust Policy.

Tuesday, October 26, 2004

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Ecology Law Quarterly has Eduardo Moisès Peñalver, Is Land Special? The Unjustified Preference for Landownership in Regulatory Takings Law; James R. Gordley, Takings: What Does Matter? A Response to Professor Peñalver; and Shi-Ling Hsu, Fairness Versus Efficiency in Environmental Law.

The September 2004 issue of Legal Theory has Julie Dickson, Methodology in Jurisprudence: A Critical Survey; Mark Greenberg, How Facts Make Law; and Ram Neta, On the Normative Significance of Brute Facts.

Monday, October 25, 2004

law review headlines 

The Fall 2004 issue of the Arizona Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Biotechnology Patents Get Special Treatment.

The Spring 2003 issue of the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law has articles from a symposium on Crossing Boundaries, Redefining Gender: A New Front on Equality.

The Journal of Law and Social Challenges has articles on Redefining Justice in a Global Era.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Southern University Law Review has articles from a Juvenile Justice Symposium.

The October 2004 issue of the UCLA Law Review has Scott L. Cummings, The Politics of Pro Bono; Allen Rostron, Beyond Market Share Liability: A Theory Of Proportional Share Liability For Nonfungible Products; and Peter J. Smith, Sources of Federalism: An Empirical Analysis of the Court's Quest For Original Meaning.

off schedule 

Journals that seem to be running behind:

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

Thursday, October 21, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that appears to be running behind:

Wednesday, October 20, 2004

catching up 

Journal that are catching up:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2004 issue of the Defense Law Journal has Richard B. Cappalli, Bringing Internet Information to Court: Of "Legislative Facts".

The Spring 2003 issue of the Emory International Law Review has Lawrence O. Gostin, The Global Reach of HIV/AIDS: Science, Politics, Economics, and Research.

The Spring/Summer 2004 issue of the Loyola International Law Review has articles from a symposium about the Free Trade Area of the Americas

The Spring 2004 issue of the Natural Resources Journal has articles on Legal and Economic Issues in Private Land Conservation.

The Autumn 2004 issue of the Penn State International Law Review has Andy Rich, The Environment: Adequacy of Protection in Times of War.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Temple Environmental Law and Technology Journal has Trip Pollard, Follow the Money: Transportation Investments for Smarter Growth, and Joseph McClure, Comment, GDF Realty Investments, Ltd. v. Norton: Analyzing the Endangered Species Act & Constitutional Authority to Regulate Intrastate Takings of Isolated Endangered Species Under the Commerce Clause.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Wake Forest Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Organizational Sentencing: Federal Guidelines and the Benefits of Programs to Prevent and Detect Violations of Law.

off schedule 

Journals that are off schedule:

Monday, October 18, 2004

law review headlines 

The Summer 2004 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Twenty-Five Years of George P. Fletcher's Rethinking Criminal Law.

The October 2004 issue of the Virginia Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled 50 Years of Brown v. Board of Education.

The second issue of the 2004 Wisconsin Law Review has articles from the Freedom from Contract Symposium.

The third issue of the 2004 Wisconsin Law Review has Bruce A. Green and Fred C. Zacharias, Prosecutorial Neutrality; and John R. Kroger, The Philosophical Foundations of Roman Law: Aristotle, the Stoics, and Roman Theories of Natural Law.

Thursday, October 14, 2004

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Albany Law Journal of Science and Technology has Charles Allen Black, The Cure for Deadly Patent Practices: Preventing Technology Suppression and Patent Shelving in the Life Sciences.

The March 2004 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has John R. Allison, Mark A. Lemley, Kimberly A. Moore and R. Derek Trunkey , Valuable Patents; Todd E. Pettys, The Mobility Paradox; and Larry D. Thompson, Jr., Adrift on a Sea of Uncertainty: Preserving Uniformity in Patent Law Post-Vornado Through Deference to the Federal Circuit.

The February 2004 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Curtis A. Bradley and Martin S. Flaherty, Executive Power Essentialism and Foreign Affairs, and Ann Woolhandler and Caleb Nelson, Does History Defeat the Standing Doctrine?.

Tuesday, October 12, 2004

new link 

Sorry to be so not-on-the-ball about this, but one of my students just brought to my attention the Washington and Lee Most-Cited Legal Periodicals U.S. and selected non-U.S. journal ranking page. For those of you who like rankings, what a find! You can sort by citations (in journals and/or in cases), different ranking systems, and all kinds of other good stuff. Really, the page is fun.

I'll change the sidebars to add this page sometime this week.

inaugural issues 

Several inaugural issues of new journals have come to my attention:Congrats!

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running late:

caught up 

A journal that has caught up (congrats!):

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the Cleveland State Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Ohio Constitution—Then and Now: An Examination of the Law and History of the Ohio Constitution on the Occasion of its Bicentennial.

The Fall 2003 issue of the John Marshall Journal of Computer and Information Law has articles from a symposium on The Regulation of Spam and E-mail Marketing.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Pittsburgh Tax Review has Eric A. Lustig, Who We Are: An Empirical Study of the Tax Law Professoriate.

The Spring 2004 issue of U.C. Davis Journal of International Law and Policy has Christopher J. Le Mon and Rachel S. Taylor, Security Council Action in the Name of Human Rights: from Rhodesia to the Congo; Miron Mushkat and Roda Mushkat, The Political Economy of International Legal Compliance: Pre-1997 Predictions and Post-1997 Realities in Hong Kong; Robert Trager and Yuri Obata, Obscenity Decisions in the Japanese and United States Supreme Courts: Cultural Values in Interpreting Free Speech; Winn S. Collins, The Commission's Delegation Dilemma: Is the European Food Safety Authority an Independent Or an Accountable Agency?; Adam I. Muchmore, Passports and Nationality in International Law; and Perry S. Smith, Speak No Evil: Apostasy, Blasphemy and Heresy in Malaysian Syariah Law.

The Fall 2003 issue of the University of St. Thomas Law Journal has articles from a founding symposium entitled God, the Person, History, and the Law: Themes from the Work of Judge John T. Noonan, Jr. (including many papers from various panels).

Friday, October 08, 2004

caught up 

A journal that has caught up (congrats!):

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

law review headlines 

The August 2004 issue of the Washington Law Review has Jeffrey R. Seul, Settling Significant Cases.

Thursday, October 07, 2004

off schedule 

Journals that seem to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2004 issue of the Georgetown International Environmental Law Review has Barry E. Hill, Steve Wolfson, and Nicholas Targ, Human Rights and the Environment: A Synopsis and Some Predictions.

The Summer 2004 issue of the Northwestern University Law Review has Adam M. Samaha, Litigant Sensitivity in First Amendment Law.

Wednesday, October 06, 2004

law review headlines 

The Winter/Spring 2004 issue of Law and Contemporary Problems has articles on Mandatory Arbitration.

The most recent issue of the QLR (Quinnipiac Law Review) has Marcia Canavan, Using Literature to Teach Legal Writing.

Tuesday, October 05, 2004

off schedule 

A journal that seems to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Summer 2004 issue of the Penn State International Law Review has Jared B. Cawley, Friend of the Court: How the WTO Justifies the Acceptance of the Amicus Curiae Brief from Non-Governmental Organizations; and John Dwight Ingram, The Geneva Convention is Woefully Outdated.

Friday, October 01, 2004

law review headlines 

The Fall 2003 issue of the Capital University Law Review has Joseph M. Farber, Justifying Judicial Review: Liberalism and Popular Sovereignty (hey Joe).

The Summer 2003 issue of the University of Pittsburgh Law Review has Charles P. Cercone, The War Against Work Product Abuse: Exposing the Legal Alchemy of Document Compilations as Work Product.

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