One of the most important ways for faculty to enrich their teaching and scholarship is through meaningful connections with the practicing bar. One effective way of developing these connections is through involvement in law reform efforts. This Essay focuses on developing these connections along two dimensions-through the work of the Uniform Law Commission and through involvement with trade organizations or nonprofit groups
In response to the demands of prospective law students, pressure from outside law organizations, and...
For generations, law students have enhanced their education by working on a law journal. In addition...
Nurturing faculty research and scholarship is a top priority for the law school. Several new initia...
One of the most important ways for faculty to enrich their teaching and scholarship is through meani...
This essay explores the ways that a law school’s unique culture impacts the role of the Associate De...
This Article recommends that we think more intentionally about how law students’ engagement in schol...
One of the most important contributions a law school can make is to the development of the law throu...
The Missouri Law Review has a distinguished history of service to the legal profession and the acade...
The presenting question for the 2012 Symposium was how can engaged scholarship enhance teaching to p...
In response to the demands of prospective law students, pressure from outside law organizations, and...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
In this Article, Professor Waggoner, newly retired, provides a retrospective on his career in law re...
This article suggests a fundamental shift in the way traditional faculty view their role in academic...
A general debate concerning whether law blogs can be legal scholarship makes little more sense than ...
In response to the demands of prospective law students, pressure from outside law organizations, and...
For generations, law students have enhanced their education by working on a law journal. In addition...
Nurturing faculty research and scholarship is a top priority for the law school. Several new initia...
One of the most important ways for faculty to enrich their teaching and scholarship is through meani...
This essay explores the ways that a law school’s unique culture impacts the role of the Associate De...
This Article recommends that we think more intentionally about how law students’ engagement in schol...
One of the most important contributions a law school can make is to the development of the law throu...
The Missouri Law Review has a distinguished history of service to the legal profession and the acade...
The presenting question for the 2012 Symposium was how can engaged scholarship enhance teaching to p...
In response to the demands of prospective law students, pressure from outside law organizations, and...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
In this Article, Professor Waggoner, newly retired, provides a retrospective on his career in law re...
This article suggests a fundamental shift in the way traditional faculty view their role in academic...
A general debate concerning whether law blogs can be legal scholarship makes little more sense than ...
In response to the demands of prospective law students, pressure from outside law organizations, and...
For generations, law students have enhanced their education by working on a law journal. In addition...
Nurturing faculty research and scholarship is a top priority for the law school. Several new initia...