Wednesday, January 26, 2005
law review headlines
The most recent issue of the Suffolk University Law Review has H. Ron Davidson, The Mechanics of Judicial Vote Switching.
Tuesday, January 25, 2005
new journal!
The first issue of the Journal of Health and Biomedical Law just came out. I can't seem to locate much information about this journal, though, so if anyone has any more background (organizational/educational affiliation, numbers of issues a year, contact information, etc.), please email me. Thanks!
caught up
A journal that is (mostly) caught up:
- University of Baltimore Law Forum (Fall 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Summer/Fall 2003 issue came out in July 2004 and Spring 2003 issue and Summer/Fall 2002 issue came out in April 2004)
off schedule
Journals that appear to be running late:
- Georgetown Law Journal (June 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- Texas Review of Entertainment and Sports Law (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- University of Memphis Law Review (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
law review headlines
The June 2004 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has Adam Winkler, Other People's Money: Corporations, Agency Costs, and Campaign Finance Law.
The January 2005 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Lucian Arye Bebchuk, The Case for Increasing Shareholder Power; and Daryl J. Levinson, Empire-Building Government in Constitutional Law.
The Winter 2004 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles on International and Comparative Health Law & Ethics: A 25-Year Retrospective.
The January 2005 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Lucian Arye Bebchuk, The Case for Increasing Shareholder Power; and Daryl J. Levinson, Empire-Building Government in Constitutional Law.
The Winter 2004 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles on International and Comparative Health Law & Ethics: A 25-Year Retrospective.
Monday, January 24, 2005
catching up
A journal that seems to be catching up:
- Hastings International and Comparative Law Review (Fall 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Spring 2004 issue came out in December 2004, Winter 2004 issue came out in April 2004, Fall 2003 issue came out in February 2004 and Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004)
- Natural Resources Journal (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Spring 2004 issue came out in October 2004, Winter 2004 issue came out in August 2004, Summer 2003 issue came out in February 2004 and Spring 2003 issue came out in December 2003)
off schedule
Journals that seem to be running late:
- Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal (Summer 2003 issue came out in January 2005, Spring 2003 issue came out in November 2004, Winter 2003 issue came out in August 2004, Fall 2002 issue came out in July 2004, Spring 2002 issue came out in February 2004, Winter 2002 issue came out in November 2003, Fall 2001 issue came out in September 2003, and its Summer 2001 issue came out in July 2003)
- Hastings Law Journal (June 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- ICSID Review (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Fall 2003 issue came out in June 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in January 2004 and Fall 2002 issue just came out in July 2003)
- Michigan Journal of International Law (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- Oklahoma City University Law Review (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Summer/Fall 2003 issue came out in June 2004, Spring 2003 issue came out in February 2004 and Fall 2002 issue came out in October 2003)
- Temple Law Review (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- University of Cincinnati Law Review (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
law review headlines
The Summer 2003 issue of the Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal has articles on The Concept of Disability.
The Fall 2004 issue of Environmental Law has articles from a symposium entitled Public Lands Management at the Crossroads: Balancing Interests in the 21st Century.
The Fall 2004 issue of Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society has articles on Valuing the Impact of Arts and Culture.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Michigan Journal of International Law has articles from a symposium entitled Diversity or Cacophony?: New Sources of Norms in International Law .
The October 2004 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Ronald Chen and Jon Hanson, The Illusion of Law: The Legitimating Schemas of Modern Policy and Corporate Law.
The most recent issue of the New York Law School Law Review has articles from the Institute for Information Law and Policy Symposium on the State of Play, with a lot of nifty people, including James Grimmelmann (Virtual Worlds as Comparative Law), who I vaguely know back from medianstrip days.
The December 2003 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has Leonard L. Riskin, Decisionmaking in Mediation: The New Old Grid and the New New Grid System; John M. Czarnetzky and Ronald J. Rychlak, An Empire of Law? Legalism and the International Criminal Court; Herwig J. Schlunk, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Double Taxation; William J. Carney and Leonard A. Silverstein, The Illusory Protections of the Poison Pill; and Michael Edmund O'Neill, When Prosecutors Don't: Trends in Federal Prosecutorial Declinations.
The July 2004 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Changing Laws of War: Do We Need a New Legal Regime after September 11?, including Neal Katyal, Sunsetting Judicial Opinions.
The November 2004 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has articles from a symposium on Race and the Law.
The most recent issue of the Ohio Northern University Law Review has articles from a symposium on Privacy and Surveillance: Emerging Legal Issues.
The Spring 2004 issue of the Oklahoma City University Law Review has articles on Employment and Labor Law.
The Winter 2004 issue of the South Texas Law Review has articles from a symposium on Lawrence v. Texas.
The November 2004 issue of the Stanford Law Review has Chris William Sanchirico, < em>Evidence, Procedure, and the Upside of Cognitive Error; Richard H. Sander, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Action in American Law Schools (that's causing so much controversy); and Christopher Sprigman, Reform(aliz)ing Copyright.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Temple Law Review has articles from a symposium on SARS, Public Health, and Global Governance.
The Summer 2004 issue of the University of Cincinnati Law Review has Barry Friedman, Lecture, The Importance of Being Positive: The Nature and Function of Judicial Review.
The December 2004 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Michael Ashley Stein, Same Struggle, Different Difference: ADA Accommodations as Antidiscrimination; and Rosa Ehrenreich Brooks, War Everywhere: Rights, National Security Law, and the Law of Armed Conflict in the Age of Terror.
The fourth issue of the 2004 Wisconsin Law Review has Michael A. McCann, Economic Efficiency and Consumer Choice Theory in Nutritional Labeling.
The Fall 2004 issue of Environmental Law has articles from a symposium entitled Public Lands Management at the Crossroads: Balancing Interests in the 21st Century.
The Fall 2004 issue of Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society has articles on Valuing the Impact of Arts and Culture.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Michigan Journal of International Law has articles from a symposium entitled Diversity or Cacophony?: New Sources of Norms in International Law .
The October 2004 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Ronald Chen and Jon Hanson, The Illusion of Law: The Legitimating Schemas of Modern Policy and Corporate Law.
The most recent issue of the New York Law School Law Review has articles from the Institute for Information Law and Policy Symposium on the State of Play, with a lot of nifty people, including James Grimmelmann (Virtual Worlds as Comparative Law), who I vaguely know back from medianstrip days.
The December 2003 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has Leonard L. Riskin, Decisionmaking in Mediation: The New Old Grid and the New New Grid System; John M. Czarnetzky and Ronald J. Rychlak, An Empire of Law? Legalism and the International Criminal Court; Herwig J. Schlunk, How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love Double Taxation; William J. Carney and Leonard A. Silverstein, The Illusory Protections of the Poison Pill; and Michael Edmund O'Neill, When Prosecutors Don't: Trends in Federal Prosecutorial Declinations.
The July 2004 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Changing Laws of War: Do We Need a New Legal Regime after September 11?, including Neal Katyal, Sunsetting Judicial Opinions.
The November 2004 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has articles from a symposium on Race and the Law.
The most recent issue of the Ohio Northern University Law Review has articles from a symposium on Privacy and Surveillance: Emerging Legal Issues.
The Spring 2004 issue of the Oklahoma City University Law Review has articles on Employment and Labor Law.
The Winter 2004 issue of the South Texas Law Review has articles from a symposium on Lawrence v. Texas.
The November 2004 issue of the Stanford Law Review has Chris William Sanchirico, < em>Evidence, Procedure, and the Upside of Cognitive Error; Richard H. Sander, A Systemic Analysis of Affirmative Action in American Law Schools (that's causing so much controversy); and Christopher Sprigman, Reform(aliz)ing Copyright.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Temple Law Review has articles from a symposium on SARS, Public Health, and Global Governance.
The Summer 2004 issue of the University of Cincinnati Law Review has Barry Friedman, Lecture, The Importance of Being Positive: The Nature and Function of Judicial Review.
The December 2004 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Michael Ashley Stein, Same Struggle, Different Difference: ADA Accommodations as Antidiscrimination; and Rosa Ehrenreich Brooks, War Everywhere: Rights, National Security Law, and the Law of Armed Conflict in the Age of Terror.
The fourth issue of the 2004 Wisconsin Law Review has Michael A. McCann, Economic Efficiency and Consumer Choice Theory in Nutritional Labeling.
Friday, January 14, 2005
almost caught up
A journal that has almost caught up:
- U.C. Davis Journal of International Law and Policy (Fall 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Spring 2004 issue came out in October 2004 and Fall 2003 issue came out in August 2004)
law review headlines
The Fall 2004 issue of the Michigan State U.-Detroit College of Law Law Review has articles from a symposium on Multi-jurisdictional and Cross-border Class Actions.
The Fall 2004 issue of U.C. Davis Journal of International Law and Policy has articles from a symposium entitled Rethinking Reconstruction after Iraq.
The Fall 2004 issue of U.C. Davis Journal of International Law and Policy has articles from a symposium entitled Rethinking Reconstruction after Iraq.
Wednesday, January 12, 2005
law review headlines
The Fall 2004 issue of the Hofstra Law Review has Rachel F. Moran, How Second-Wave Feminism Forgot the Single Woman.
The most recent issue of the Journal of College and University Law has J. Peter Byrne, The Threat to Constitutional Academic Freedom.
The November 2004 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Law of Democracy.
The most recent issue of the Journal of College and University Law has J. Peter Byrne, The Threat to Constitutional Academic Freedom.
The November 2004 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Law of Democracy.
Tuesday, January 11, 2005
caught up
A journal that has caught up (congrats!):
- Michigan Law Review (June 2004 issue came out in January 2004, May and March 2004 issues came out in November 2004, and February 2004 issue came out in October 2004)
catching up
Journals that are catching up:
- Buffalo Intellectual Property Law Journal (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005, but then it skips to Fall 2002 issue, which came out in August 2003)
- Journal of Southern Legal History (2004 issues came out in January 2005, 2003 issues came out in January 2004 and 2002 issues came out in August 2003)
- Thomas M. Cooley Journal of Practical and Clinical Law (Issue 1 from the 2003-2004 year came out in January 2004, Issue 3 from the 2002-2003 year came out in October 2004, and Issues 1 and 2 out of 3 from the 2002-2003 year came out in October 2003)
- Vermont Law Review (Summer 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Spring 2004 issue came out in November 2004)
off schedule
Journals that are off schedule:
- American Journal of Legal History (April 2004 issue came out in January 2005, January 2004 issue came out in October 2004, October 2001 issue came out in June 2004, July 2001 issue came out in February 2004, April 2001 issue came out in January 2004, January 2001 issue came out in November 2003, and October 2000 issue came out in September 2003; they appear to have skipped 2002 and 2003 to catch up)
- American Review of International Arbitration (2003 issue came out in January 2004, another 2003 issue came out in November 2004, yet another 2003 issue came out in April 2004, and 2001 issue came out in September 2003)
- Cardozo Public Law, Policy, and Ethics Journal (May 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- Duke Law Journal (Apirl and March 2004 issues came out in January 2005)
- Journal of Law and Politics (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- Tax Law Review (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
- Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005, Fall 2003 issue came out in June 2004 and Spring 2003 issue came out in March 2004)
- Villanova Environmental Law Journal (second issue of 2004 published in January 2005, 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)
- Water Law Review (Spring 2004 issue came out in January 2005)
law review headlines
Okay, we've fallen way behind because of the holidays. But here's an update, finally!
The Fall 2004 issue of the Administrative Law Review has articles from the Administrative Law Discussion Forum.
The October 2004 issue of the American Journal of International Law has Sabrina Safrin, Hyperownership in a Time of Biotechnological Promise: The International Conflict to Control the Building Blocks of Life; Thomas M. Franck, Criminals, Combatants, or What? An Examination of the Role of Law in Responding to the Threat of Terror; Richard B. Bilder and Detlev F. Vagts; Speaking Law to Power: Lawyers and Torture; and Steve Charnovitz, Using Framework Statutes to Facilitate U.S. Treaty Making.
The most recent issue of the Brigham Young University Law Review has articles from the Church Autonomy Conference.
The December 2004 issue of the Columbia Law Review has Thomas W. Merrill, Rethinking Article I, Section 1: From Nondelegation to Exclusive Delegation; and Eduardo Moisés Peñalver, Regulatory Taxings.
The December 2003 issue of the Duke Law Journal has Wendy E. Wagner, Commons Ignorance: The Failure of Environmental Law to Produce Needed Information on Health and the Environment.
The 2004 issue of the Florida Journal of International Law has articles from a seminar entitled Law, Culture, and Society: Latcrit Theory and Transdisciplinary Approaches.
The Fall/Winter 2004 issue of the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics has Jon C. Blue, A Well-tuned Cymbal? Extrajudicial Political Activity; and Douglas T. Kendall and Jason C. Rylander, Tainted Justice: How Private Judicial Trips Undermine Public Confidence in the Judiciary
The December 2004 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Douglas A. Kysar, Preferences for Processes: The Process/Product Distinction and the Regulation of Consumer Choice; and James E. Pfander, Article I Tribunals, Article III Courts, and the Judicial Power of the United States.
The December 2004 issue of the Journal of Human Rights has Dmitri Shalin, Liberalism, Affect Control, and Emotionally Intelligent Democracy.
The December 2004 issue of the Journal of the Patent and Trademark Office Society has William B. Slate, Ten Things That Should be Changed About Patent Law.
The Fall 2004 issue of Law and Social Inquiry has Timothy T. Clydesdale, A Forked River Runs Through Law School: Toward Understanding Race, Gender, Age, and Related Gaps in Law School Performance and Bar Passage.
The June 2004 issue of the Michigan Law Review has articles from a colloquium entitled The Boundaries of Liberty After Lawrence v. Texas.
The December 2004 issue of the Minnesota Law Review has Cary Coglianese, Richard Zeckhauser, and Edward Parson, Seeking Truth for Power: Informational Strategy and Regulatory Policymaking; Orly Lobel, The Renew Deal: The Fall of Regulation and the Rise of Governance in Contemporary Legal Thought; Bradley C. Karkkainen, Reply: "New Governance" in Legal Thought and in the World: Some Splitting as Antidote to Overzealous Lumping; and Orly Lobel, Surreply: Setting the Agenda for New Governance Research.
The Fall 2004 issue of the New England Law Review has articles from a symposium called Nation-Building: Lessons from the Past and the Challenges Ahead.
The December 2004 issue of the New York University Law Review has Robert B. Ahdieh, Between Dialogue and Decree: International Review of National Courts.
The December 2004 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has Gregory Mitchell, Essay, Empirical Legal Scholarship as Scientific Dialogue.
The latest issue of the Seton Hall Law Review has Lewis H. LaRue and David S. Caudill, A Non-Romantic View of Expert Testimony.
The November 2004 issue of the Southern California Law Review has Stephen J. Choi and G. Mitu Gulati, Choosing the Next Supreme Court Justice: An Empirical Ranking of Judge Performance; William P. Marshall, Be Careful What You Wish For: The Problems with Using Empirical Rankings to Select Supreme Court Justices; Patrick S. Shin, Judging Merit; WERL, On Tournaments for Appointing Great Justices to the U.S. Supreme Court; and Lawrence B. Solum, Procedural Justice.
The Spring 2004 issue of Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems has articles from a symposium entitled Whither Goes Cuba? Prospects for Economic and Social Development.
The Winter 2004 issue of the Tulane Environmental Law Journal has Richard J. Lazarus, Judging Environmental Law.
The Fall 2004 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Tribal Sovereignty and United States v. Lara.
The Fall 2004 issue of the University of Toledo Law Review has articles from the Leadership in Legal Education Symposium V.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Vermont Law Review has articles from a symposium on Law in Film/Film in Law.
The November 2004 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has Samuel Issacharoff, Collateral Damage: The Endangered Center in American Politics.
The Fall 2004 issue of the Administrative Law Review has articles from the Administrative Law Discussion Forum.
The October 2004 issue of the American Journal of International Law has Sabrina Safrin, Hyperownership in a Time of Biotechnological Promise: The International Conflict to Control the Building Blocks of Life; Thomas M. Franck, Criminals, Combatants, or What? An Examination of the Role of Law in Responding to the Threat of Terror; Richard B. Bilder and Detlev F. Vagts; Speaking Law to Power: Lawyers and Torture; and Steve Charnovitz, Using Framework Statutes to Facilitate U.S. Treaty Making.
The most recent issue of the Brigham Young University Law Review has articles from the Church Autonomy Conference.
The December 2004 issue of the Columbia Law Review has Thomas W. Merrill, Rethinking Article I, Section 1: From Nondelegation to Exclusive Delegation; and Eduardo Moisés Peñalver, Regulatory Taxings.
The December 2003 issue of the Duke Law Journal has Wendy E. Wagner, Commons Ignorance: The Failure of Environmental Law to Produce Needed Information on Health and the Environment.
The 2004 issue of the Florida Journal of International Law has articles from a seminar entitled Law, Culture, and Society: Latcrit Theory and Transdisciplinary Approaches.
The Fall/Winter 2004 issue of the Georgetown Journal of Legal Ethics has Jon C. Blue, A Well-tuned Cymbal? Extrajudicial Political Activity; and Douglas T. Kendall and Jason C. Rylander, Tainted Justice: How Private Judicial Trips Undermine Public Confidence in the Judiciary
The December 2004 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Douglas A. Kysar, Preferences for Processes: The Process/Product Distinction and the Regulation of Consumer Choice; and James E. Pfander, Article I Tribunals, Article III Courts, and the Judicial Power of the United States.
The December 2004 issue of the Journal of Human Rights has Dmitri Shalin, Liberalism, Affect Control, and Emotionally Intelligent Democracy.
The December 2004 issue of the Journal of the Patent and Trademark Office Society has William B. Slate, Ten Things That Should be Changed About Patent Law.
The Fall 2004 issue of Law and Social Inquiry has Timothy T. Clydesdale, A Forked River Runs Through Law School: Toward Understanding Race, Gender, Age, and Related Gaps in Law School Performance and Bar Passage.
The June 2004 issue of the Michigan Law Review has articles from a colloquium entitled The Boundaries of Liberty After Lawrence v. Texas.
The December 2004 issue of the Minnesota Law Review has Cary Coglianese, Richard Zeckhauser, and Edward Parson, Seeking Truth for Power: Informational Strategy and Regulatory Policymaking; Orly Lobel, The Renew Deal: The Fall of Regulation and the Rise of Governance in Contemporary Legal Thought; Bradley C. Karkkainen, Reply: "New Governance" in Legal Thought and in the World: Some Splitting as Antidote to Overzealous Lumping; and Orly Lobel, Surreply: Setting the Agenda for New Governance Research.
The Fall 2004 issue of the New England Law Review has articles from a symposium called Nation-Building: Lessons from the Past and the Challenges Ahead.
The December 2004 issue of the New York University Law Review has Robert B. Ahdieh, Between Dialogue and Decree: International Review of National Courts.
The December 2004 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has Gregory Mitchell, Essay, Empirical Legal Scholarship as Scientific Dialogue.
The latest issue of the Seton Hall Law Review has Lewis H. LaRue and David S. Caudill, A Non-Romantic View of Expert Testimony.
The November 2004 issue of the Southern California Law Review has Stephen J. Choi and G. Mitu Gulati, Choosing the Next Supreme Court Justice: An Empirical Ranking of Judge Performance; William P. Marshall, Be Careful What You Wish For: The Problems with Using Empirical Rankings to Select Supreme Court Justices; Patrick S. Shin, Judging Merit; WERL, On Tournaments for Appointing Great Justices to the U.S. Supreme Court; and Lawrence B. Solum, Procedural Justice.
The Spring 2004 issue of Transnational Law and Contemporary Problems has articles from a symposium entitled Whither Goes Cuba? Prospects for Economic and Social Development.
The Winter 2004 issue of the Tulane Environmental Law Journal has Richard J. Lazarus, Judging Environmental Law.
The Fall 2004 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Tribal Sovereignty and United States v. Lara.
The Fall 2004 issue of the University of Toledo Law Review has articles from the Leadership in Legal Education Symposium V.
The Summer 2004 issue of the Vermont Law Review has articles from a symposium on Law in Film/Film in Law.
The November 2004 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has Samuel Issacharoff, Collateral Damage: The Endangered Center in American Politics.