Thursday, April 28, 2005

catching up 

A journal is catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that seems to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Winter 2005 issue of the Catholic University Law Review has Jared A. Goldstein, Is There a "Religious Question" Doctrine? Judicial Authority to Examine Religious Practices and Beliefs.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Columbia Human Rights Law Review has articles from a Symposium on Race, Crime, and Voting: Social, Political, and Philosophical Perspectives on Felony Disenfranchisement in America.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Georgetown International Environmental Law Review has Thomas Stowe Mullikin, Nancy Sara Smith, Michael Thomas Champion, Inextricably Intertwined---Environmental Management and the Public.

The Winter 2005 issue of Howard Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Intellectual Property and Social Justice.

The most recent issue of the Journal of Law and Policy has articles on Science for Judges III: Maintaining the Integrity of Scientific Research and Forensic Evidence in Criminal Proceedings, including David Michaels, M.P.H., Ph.D. & Celeste Monforton, M.P.H., Scientific Evidence in the Regulatory System: Manufacturing Uncertainty and the Demise of the Formal Regulatory System; and Sheldon Krimsky, The Funding Effect in Science and Its Implications for the Judiciary.

The most recent issue of the New York University Annual Survey of American Law has articles from a symposium on The Powers and Pitfalls of Technology.

The April 2005 issue of the Virginia Law Review has Thomas B. Colby, Revitalizing the Forgotten Uniformity Constraint on the Commerce Power; Caleb Nelson, What Is Textualism?; John F. Manning, Textualism and Legislative Intent; and Caleb Nelson, A Response to Professor Manning.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Washington and Lee Law Review has articles from a symposium on Critical Race Theory: The Next Frontier.

Sunday, April 24, 2005

new journal announcement! 

The editors of Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left are pleased to announce the release of the journal's inaugural Spring 2005 issue. The issue can be accessed at

http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/unbound/

The issue includes interesting articles such as Richard Thompson Ford, Political Identity as Identity Politics; and Thomas M. Franck, Is Anything "Left" in International Law?, to name just two.

Those interested in more information can email Meghan Morris, or Unbound's Editors-in-Chief,
Zinaida Miller and Brishen Rogers. Congrats!

Saturday, April 23, 2005

mostly caught up 

A journal that has mostly caught up (congrats!):

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that are running behind:

law review headlines 

The most recent issue of the American University International Law Review has Jeremy Firestone, Jonathan Lilley, and Isabel Torres de Noronha, Cultural Diversity, Human Rights, and the Emergence of Indigenous Peoples in International and Comparative Environmental Law.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Capital University Law Review has articles from a symposium on The Role of a Corporate Lawyer.

The March 2005 issue of the Cardozo Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Weapons of Mass Destruction, National Security, and a Free Press: Seminal Issues as Viewed through the Lens of the Progressive Case.

The Winter 2004 issue of the Case Western Journal of International Law has articles from a symposium on The Future of International Intellectual Property: The International Relations of Intellectual Property law.

The Special Edition 2005 issue of the Emory Law Journal has articles on The Foundations of Law.

The Winter 2005 issue of Environmental Law has Bradford C. Mank, Standing and Global Warming: Is Injury to All Injury to None?.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law has articles from a conference entitled From Autocracy to Democracy: The Effort to Establish Market Democracies in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The Spring 2005 issue of Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy has J. Peter Byrne, Property and Environment: Thoughts on an Evolving Relationship.

The April 2005 issue of the Harvard Law Review has Richard H. Fallon, Jr., Legitimacy and the Constitution ; David A. Strauss, Legitimacy and Obedience; and Nicholas Quinn Rosenkranz, Executing the Treaty Power.

The Spring 2004 issue of the Hofstra Labor and Employment Law Journal has articles from a Don't Ask, Don't Tell Symposium.

The Symposium 2005 issue of the Houston Law Review has articles on Free Will and Religious Liberty.

The Spring 2005 issue of Journal of Law, Medicine, and Ethics has articles from a symposium on The Regulation of Biobanks.

The February 2005 issue of the Michigan Law Review has Trevor W. Morrison, Private Attorneys General and the First Amendment; and Cornelia T.L. Pillard, The Unfulfilled Promise of the Constitution in Executive Hands.

The Special Issue 2004 of the Mississippi Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled The Tools to Interpret the Fourth Amendment.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Natural Resources Journal has articles on National Wildlife Refuges.

The Fall 2004 issue of the New England Journal of International and Comparative Law has articls on The Globalization of Infectious Diseases.

The most recent issue of the Notre Dame Journal of Law, Ethics and Public Policy has articles from a symposium on Security and Liberty.

The March 2005 issue of the Notre Dame Law Review has articles on The SEC at 70.

The most recent issue of the Rutgers Computer and Technology Law Journal has Andrew Beckerman-Rodau, Ethical Risks from the Use of Technology.

The most recent issue of the Suffolk University Law Review has articles from Beyond Prosecution: Sexual Assault Victim’s Rights in Theory and Practice Symposium.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Temple Environmental Law and Technology Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Saving Spaces: Smart Growth and Beyond, as well as Jeffrey Rudd, The Forest Service’s Epistemic Judgments: Enhancing Transparency to Ensure “New Knowledge” Informs Agency Decision-Making Processes.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Tulsa Journal of Comparative and International Law has articles from a symposium entitled International Law and the 2003-04 Supreme Court Term: Building Bridges or Constructing Barriers Between National, Foreign, and International Law.

The most recent issue of the University of Illinois Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Promises to Keep?: Brown v. Board and Equal Educational Opportunity.

The Fall 2004 issue of the University of Miami Inter-American Law Review has articles from a symposium on International Arbitration.

The Winter 2005 issue of Urban Lawyer has Alan D. Cohn, Mutual Aid: Intergovernmental Agreements for Emergency Preparedness and Response.

The most recent issue of the William Mitchell Law Review has articles on Recent Developments in Health Care Law.

Thursday, April 14, 2005

new journal pre-announcement 

Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left, will have its launch next week. They'll be sending me a link when everything's ready, but for the time being, here's the information they've given me. Congrats, Unbound!
CAMBRIDGE, MA – On Wednesday, April 20, students at Harvard Law School will publish a new issue of Unbound: Harvard Journal of the Legal Left, featuring articles by leading scholars critical of contemporary legal discourse.

This will be the first issue of Unbound following a broad reworking of the journal’s mission and website earlier this year. Founded in 2001, Unbound is now dedicated to renewing the legal left by building a site where lawyers and legal scholars can critique liberal shibboleths and radically rethink their political and intellectual commitments.

In Unbound’s revised mission statement, the editors clarify their rationale for this new orientation:

Like many on the legal left, we feel a bit homeless. Others have built substantial “progressive” organizations and law reviews that support, channel, and house their political and intellectual endeavors. While we often sympathize with and participate in activist projects that advance economic redistribution, human rights, and racial, gender, and sexual equality, we are unsatisfied with the constraining language of liberalism within which such projects tend to operate. We’d like something spicier and more satisfying, a place where we can refine our ideas without having to justify our existence to unsympathetic critics.

Unbound’s Spring 2005 issue features articles by such luminaries as Libby Adler (Northeastern), Christine Desan (Harvard), Richard Ford (Stanford), Thomas Franck (NYU), Janet Halley (Harvard), and Duncan Kennedy (Harvard), as well as several essays by current law students dissatisfied with the law school experience. The content will be available at http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/unbound/

“Two decades after the birth of Critical Legal Studies,” the editors observe in the new mission statement, “there is an urgent need for new politics based upon and interacting with new theory. Discussion must include systemic critique and productive self-interrogation, both of which we plan to promote in Unbound."

catching up 

A journal that is catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that seem to be running late:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2004 issue of the Berkeley Business Law Journal has Larry E. Ribstein, Why Corporations?; Brian R. Cheffins and Randall S. Thomas, The Globalization (Americanization?) of Executive Pay; and Lucian Arye Bebchuk and Jesse M. Fried, Stealth Compensation via Retirement Benefits.

The November 2004 issue of the Cardozo Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Private Parties as Defendants in Civil Rights Litigation.

The April 2005 issue of the Creighton Law Review has Bruce A. Antkowiak, Judicial Nullification.

The January 2005 issue of the Cornell Law Review has Abraham Bell and Gideon Parchomovsky, A Theory of Property; John E. Lopatka and William H. Page, Economic Authority and the Limits of Expertise in Antitrust Cases; and Barak D. Richman, Behavioral Economics and Health Policy: Understanding Medicaid’s Failure.

The most recent issue of the Indiana International and Comparative Law Review has Damjan Kukovec, International Antitrust - What Law in Action?; and Elizabeth Barrett Ristroph, How Can the United States Correct Multi-national Corporations' Environmental Abuses Committed in the Name of Trade?.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Pace Law Review has Nathan Oman, Statutory Interpretation in Econotopia.

The March 2005 issue of the Stanford Law Review has Michael Abramowicz and Maxwell Stearns, Defining Dicta; and Eugene Volokh, Crime-Facilitating Speech.

The March 2004 issue of the University of Kansas Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Reforming Environmental Law: Can Regulation Be More Adaptive?, including Robert L. Glicksman and Sidney A. Shapiro, Improving Regulation Through Incremental Adjustment; J.B. Ruhl, Taking Adaptive Management Seriously: A Case Study of the Endangered Species Act; A. Dan Tarlock, A First Look at a Modem Legal Regime for a "Post-Modem" United States Army Corps of Engineers; Clifford Rechtschaffen, Promoting Pragmatic Risk Regulation: Is Enforcement Discretion the Answer?; and James L. Huffman, Making Environmental Regulation More Adaptive Through Decentralization: The Case for Subsidiarity; and David Cozad, Responsive Remarks to Articles Presented at the Kansas Law Review Symposium on Reforming Environmental Law: Can Regulation Be More Adaptive?.

Thursday, April 07, 2005

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

law review headlines 

The Fall 2004 issue of the Arizona State Law Journal has Frederick Schauer, Lecture, The Failure of the Common Law.

The February 2005 issue of the Cardozo Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Walter Benjamin after the Twentieth Century: The Future of a Past.

The Spring 2005 issue of the Defense Law Journal has Jennifer K. Robbennolt, Apologies and Legal Settlement: An Empirical Examination.

The March 2005 issue of the Fordham Law Review has articles from a symposium on Theories of Taking the Constitution Seriously Outside the Courts.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Georgetown Journal of Gender and the Law has articles from its Annual Gender, Sexuality and the Law Symposium.

The November 2004 issue of the Georgetown Law Journal has Jon Hanson and David Yosifon, The Situational Character: A Critical Realist Perspective on the Human Animal; Robert L. Tsai, Fire, Metaphor, and Constitutional Myth-Making; Ehud Guttel, Overcorrection; Donald C. Langevoort, Essay, Resetting the Corporate Thermostat: Lessons from the Recent Financial Scandals About Self-Deception, Deceiving Others and the Design of Internal Controls; and Steven Goldberg, Essay, Albert Einstein, Esq..

The Fall 2004 issue of the St. Louis University Law Journal has articles on Administrative Law and Health Law.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Stetson Law Review has articles from the Center for Excellence in Advocacy Symposium.

Wednesday, April 06, 2005

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

A journal that is still running behind:

law review headlines 

The September 2004 issue of the Boston College Law Review has articles from The State of Federal Income Taxation Symposium: Rates, Progressivity, and Budget Processes.

The April 2005 issue of Industrial Relations: A Journal of Economy and Society has Selected Papers from the International Industrial Relations Association.

The April 2005 issue of the Journal of Conflict Resolution is a special issue on The Political Economy of Transnational Terrorism.

The March 2005 issue of the North Carolina Law Review has John Fee, The Formal State Action Doctrine and Free Speech Analysis; Robert E. Toone, The Incoherence of Defendant Autonomy; and Robert M. Lloyd, Essay, Hard Law Firms and Soft Law Schools.

The March 2005 issue of the U.C. Davis Law Review has articles from a symposium on Immigration and Civil Rights After September 11: The Impact on California.

The Spring 2005 issue of the University of Colorado Law Review has Robert G. Natelson, Federal Land Retention and the Constitution 's Property Clause: The Original Understanding; David W. Case, Corporate Environmental Reporting as Informational Regulation: A Law and Economics Perspective; Tseming Yang, The Effectiveness of the NAFTA Environmental Side Agreement's Citizen Submission Process: A Case Study of Metales y Derivados; and Harold H. Bruff, Essay, Executive Power and the Public Lands.

The Fall 2004 issue of the Virginia Journal of International Law has Andrew T. Guzman, Food Fears: Health and Safety at the WTO; Alison Elizabeth Chase, Legal Mechanisms of the International Community and the United States Concerning State Sponsorship of Terrorism; Gregory S. Gordon, "A War of Media, Words, Newspapers, and Radio Stations": The ICTR Media Trial Verdict and a New Chapter in the International Law of Hate Speech; and Charles N. Brower and Jeremy K. Sharpe, The Creeping Codification of Transnational Commercial Law: An Arbitrator's Perspective.

The most recent issue of the Widener Law Journal has articles from a symposium entitled Can Actions Teach Louder Than Words: The Role of Mentoring and Modeling in Teaching Professional Ethics.

Friday, April 01, 2005

blawg review publicity 

From The Washington Lawyer:"Blogs allow for easy access to information and make it easier for lawyers with similar practice interests to get in contact with each other," says . . . says an appellate environmental litigator for the federal government and cocreator of the Blawg Review, which tracks articles and commentaries in law review journals. (Corrective note from Steph: I have by now actually left the federal government. Instead, I will be starting this July as a visiting professor at the Washington and Lee University School of Law.)

catching up 

Journals that are catching up:

off schedule 

Journals that are running late:

law review headlines 

The Spring 2005 issue of the American Law and Economics Review is a special issue on Comparative Law.

The most recent issue of the Chicago-Kent Law Review has articles from a symposium entitled Final Status for Kosovo: Untying the Gordian Knot.

The March 2004 issue of the Columbia Law Review has Cynthia Estlund, Rebuilding the Law of the Workplace in an Era of Self-Regulation; and Owen D. Jones and Timothy H. Goldsmith, Law and Behavioral Biology.

The February 2005 issue of the Creighton Law Review has articles from a symposium on the Implications of Lawrence and Goodridge for the Recognition of Same-Sex Marriages and the Validity of DOMA.

The Fall/Winter 2004 issue of the Duke Journal of Comparative and International Law has Henry H. Perritt, Jr., Providing Judicial Review for Decisions by Political Trustees.

The December 2004 issue of the Fordham Urban Law Journal has articles from a symposium on Fifty Years of Reflection: Brown v. Board of Education and Its Universal Implications.

The October 2004 issue of the University of Miami Law Review has Sarah H. Ramsey and Robert F. Kelly, Social Science Knowledge in Family Law Cases: Judicial Gate-Keeping in the Daubert Era.

The October 2004 issue of the Vanderbilt Law Review has articles on Securities Class Actions.

The March 2005 issue of the Virginia Law Review has Matthew C. Stephenson, Public Regulation of Private Enforcement: The Case for Expanding the Role of Administrative Agencies.

The February 2005 issue of the William and Mary Law Review has articles from a symposium on Dual Enforcement of Constitutional Norms.

The sixth issue of the 2004 Wisconsin Law Review has Jay A. Soled, Third-Party Civil Tax Penalties and Professional Standards; and Emily J. Sack, Battered Women and the State: The Struggle for the Future of Domestic Violence Policy.

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