Wednesday, March 30, 2005

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that seem to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2005 issue of the Administrative Law Review has Frank Ackerman, Lisa Heinzerling, Rachel Massey, Applying Cost-Benefit to Past Decisions: Was Environmental Protection Ever a Good Idea?.

The most recent issue of the American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy and the Law has articles from a symposium entitled The Feminism and Legal Theory Project; Celebrating Twenty Years of Feminist Pedagogy, Praxis and Prisms.

The January 2005 issue of the Cardozo Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Jurocracy and Distrust: Reconsidering the Federal Judicial Appointments Process.

The Summer 2004 issue of the Georgetown Immigration Law Journal contains articles from a Supreme Court Review Symposium.

The March 2004 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Lee Anne Fennell, Revealing Options; and Jerry Kang, Trojan Horses of Race.

The Winter 2005 issue of the Indiana Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Towards a Model Death Penalty Code: The Massachusetts Governor’s Council Report.

The most recent issue of the Jurist: Studies in Church Law and Ministry has articles on Collegiality in the Church: Theology and Canon Law.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Michigan StateLaw Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Death of Poletown: The Future of Eminent Domain and Urban Development after County of Wayne v. Hathcock.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Pace Law Review has articles from a symposium on Prison Reform Revisited: The Unfinished Agenda.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Southern California Interdisciplinary Law Journal has Kirk W. Junker, Reading Attitude in the Constitutional Wish; Daniel R. Cahoy and Min Ding, Using Experimental Economics to Peek into the “Black Box” of Jury Behavior: A Proposal for Jury Research Reform; and Stephen L. Wasby, Unpublished Court of Appeals Decisions: A Hard Look at the Process.

The January 2005 issue of the Southern California Law Review has Gary D. Rowe, Constitutionalism in the Streets; and R. Polk Wagner, On Software Regulation.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Thomas Jefferson Law Review has articles from the 4th Annual Women and the Law Conference.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Tulsa Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled The Funding of Religious Institutions in Light of Locke v. Davey.

The Winter 2005 issue of the University of Chicago Law Review has articles from an Antitrust Symposium.

The March 2005 issue of the University of Richmond Law Review has articles from a symposium on Federal Judicial Selection.

The Spring 2004 issue of the University of St. Thomas Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Understanding the Intersection of Business and Legal Ethics.

Friday, March 18, 2005

catching up 

A journal that still seems to be catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that is still seems to be running late:

law review headlines 

The February 2005 issue of the UCLA Law Review has Roger P. Alford, In Search of a Theory for Constitutional Comparativism; Rachel E. Barkow, Administering Crime; and Marsha Garrison, Is Consent Necessary? An Evaluation of the Emerging Law of Cohabitant Obligation.

The final 2004 issue of the Utah Law Review has articles from a symposium on Racial Profiling.

Wednesday, March 16, 2005

catching up 

Journals that appear to be catching up:

Monday, March 14, 2005

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that appear to be running late:

law review headlines 

The October 2004 issue of the American University Law Review has Ira P. Robbins, Anthrax Hoaxes; Arthur B. Laby, Resolving Conflicts of Duty in Fiduciary Relationships; and Marina Lao, Reclaiming a Role for Intent Evidence in Monopolization Analysis.

The January 2005 issue of the California Law Review has Eric A. Posner and John C. Yoo, Judicial Independence in International Tribunals; Allison Marston Danner and Jenny S. Martinez, Guilty Associations: Joint Criminal Enterprise, Command Responsibility, and the Development of International Criminal Law; and Jamie A. Grodsky, Genetics and Environmental Law: Redefining Public Health.

The Winter 2005 issue of the Chicago Journal of International Law has articles on War, International Law, and Sovereignty: Reevaluating the Rules of the Game in a New Century, including an article by my future compatriot at Washington and Lee: David Zaring, Informal Procedure, Hard and Soft, in International Administration.

The most recent issue of the Cornell International Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Peacekeeping and Security in Countries Utilizing Child Soldiers.

The January 2005 issue of the George Washington Law Review has Gary Lawson, Discretion as Delegation: The "Proper" Understanding of the Nondelegation Doctrine; Mark Seidenfeld and Janna Satz Nugent, "The Friendship of the People”: Citizen Participation in Environmental Enforcement; and Amy Coney Barnett, Statutory Stare Decisis in the Courts of Appeals.

The most recent issue of the Harvard Environmental Law Review has Jeffrey G. Miller , Theme and Variations in Statutory Preclusions Against Successive Environmental Enforcement Actions by EPA and Citizens Part Two: Statutory Preclusions on EPA Enforcement; David E. Adelman, The False Promise of the Genomics Revolution for Environmental Law; and Andrew P. Morriss, Bruce Yandle, and Andrew Dorchak, Choosing How To Regulate.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Journal of Appellate Practice and Process has Sarah Levien Shullman, The Illusion of Devil's Advocacy: How the Justices of the Supreme Court Foreshadow Their Decisions During Oral Argument.

The January 2005 issue of the Journal of Legal Studies (Chicago) has Daylian M. Cain, George Loewenstein, and Don A. Moore , The Dirt on Coming Clean: Perverse Effects of Disclosing Conflicts of Interest; W. Kip Viscusi and Richard J. Zeckhauser, Recollection Bias and the Combat of Terrorism; Max Schanzenbach, Racial and Sex Disparities in Prison Sentences: The Effect of District-Level Judicial Demographics; Dhammika Dharmapala and Richard H. McAdams, Words That Kill? An Economic Model of the Influence of Speech on Behavior (with Particular Reference to Hate Speech); Amy Farmer and Paul Pecorino, Civil Litigation with Mandatory Discovery and Voluntary Transmission of Private Information; Edward M. Iacobucci and Ralph A. Winter , Asset Securitization and Asymmetric Information; Giuseppe Dari-Mattiacci and Gerrit De Geest, The Filtering Effect of Sharing Rules; Dhammika Dharmapala and Sandra A. Hoffmann , Bilateral Accidents with Intrinsically Interdependent Costs of Precaution; and Dana A. Kerr, The Effect of Ownership Structure on Insurance Company Litigation Strategy.

The Spring 2003 issue of the Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative Law Review has David L. Markell, The North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation After Ten Years: Lessons About Institutional Structure and Public Participation in Governance; and John H. Knox, Separated at Birth: The North American Agreements on Labor and the Environment.

The April 2004 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has Lawrence B. Solum and Minn Chung, The Layers Principle: Internet Architecture and the Law; Robert K. Vischer, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Rethinking the Value of Associations; and James A. Sonne, The Perils of Universal Accommodation: The Workplace Religious Freedom Act of 2003 and the Affirmative Action of 147,096,000 Souls.

The most recent issue of the St. Louis University Public Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Out of the Closet and into the Light: The Legal Issues of Sexual Orientation.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Texas Wesleyan Law Review has articles from a symposium on Problem Solving Processes: Peacemakers and the Law.

The most recent issue of the University of Illinois Law Review has William P. Marshall, The Limits on Congress's Authority to Investigate the President; Lee Ann Fennell, Contracting Communities; and Charles Yablon, The Meaning of Probability Judgments: An Essay on the Use and Misuse of Behavioral Economics.

The Winter 2005 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor and Employment Law has Ronald Turner, Title VII and the Inequality-Enhancing Effects of the Bisexual and Equal Opportunity Harasser Defenses.

The most recent issue of the Villanova Law Review has Alex Glashausser, Difference and Deference in Treaty Interpretation.

The Winter 2005 issue of the Yale Journal of International Law has Sheila Jasanoff, Lawrence Busch, Robin Grove-White, and Brian Wynne, Adjudicating the GM Food Wars: Science, Risk, and Democracy in World Trade Law.

Wednesday, March 02, 2005

off schedule 

Journals that seem to be running behind:

law review headlines 

The March 2005 issue of Social and Legal Studies is a special issue on Sexual Movements and Gendered Boundaries: Legal Negotiations of the Global and the Local.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005

catching up 

A journal that is still catching up:

caught up 

Journals that have caught up (congrats!):

off schedule 

Journal that appear to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Summer 2004 issue of the Cornell Journal of Law and Public Policy has articles from a symposium called Change at Work: Implications for Labor Law.

The Fall 2003 issue of the Comparative Labor Law and Policy Journal has articles on Comparative Labor and Employment Law and Policy in the Next Quarter Century.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Emory Law Journal has E. Thomas Sullivan & Robert B. Thompson, The Supreme Court and Private Law: The Vanishing Importance of Securities and Antitrust; and Rachel D. Godsil, Viewing the Cathedral from Behind the Color Line: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Environmental Racism.

The Winter 2005 issue of the New England Law Review has Laura I. Appleman, The Rise of the Modern American Law School: How Professionalization, German Scholarship, and Legal Reform Shaped Our System of Legal Education; and Charles J. Ten Brink, A Jurisprudential Approach to Teaching Legal Research.

The January 2005 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has articles from a symposium on Competing and Complementary Rule Systems: Civil Procedure and ADR.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Temple Political and Civil Rights Law Review has articles from a symposium on Vision and Revision: Exploring the History, Evolution, And Future of the Fourteenth Amendment.

The January 2005 issue of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review has Anthony J. Bellia Jr., State Courts and the Making of Federal Common Law.

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