Draft No. 4 is an essay collection by John McPhee about his long career as a journalist for The New Yorker. This book review uses the essay collection as a jumping-off point to discuss the similarities and differences between legal writing and long-form journalism, and what legal writers can learn about the writing process from journalists like McPhee
Science of Legal Method. Select Essays by Various Authors. Translation by Ernest Bruncken, Washingto...
Legal academics generally publish in student-edited journals that have no sole-submission requiremen...
John McPhee was born in Princeton, New Jersey, and was educated at Princeton University and Cambridg...
Draft No. 4 is an essay collection by John McPhee about his long career as a journalist for The New...
The names of the contributors to this volume are enough to insure the distinguished character of the...
Law reviews have short memories. Other institutions count on long-term managers and well-kept files ...
In this first full-length study of McPhee, Michael Pearson argues that the writer successfully emplo...
Review of the book 'The journalist's guide to media law, 4th edition', by M. Pearson and M. Polden, ...
Reviews the book, Legal-Lay Communication: Textual Travels in the Law by C. Heffer, F. Rock and J. C...
This article reviews the book: “News 2.0 Can Journalism Survive the Internet?”, by Martin Hirst
Legal Writing: Getting It Right and Getting It Written is a legal writing aid that is in a class by ...
In an essay in the Texas Law Review not too long ago, Sandy Levinson lamented the degree to which la...
A review of Brian Artese\u27s Testimony on Trial: Conrad, James and the Contest for Modernism, publi...
The article reviews the book A Political History of Journalism, by Géraldine Muhlmann
Three professors from the University of North Dakota have blazed the path for addressing issues in ...
Science of Legal Method. Select Essays by Various Authors. Translation by Ernest Bruncken, Washingto...
Legal academics generally publish in student-edited journals that have no sole-submission requiremen...
John McPhee was born in Princeton, New Jersey, and was educated at Princeton University and Cambridg...
Draft No. 4 is an essay collection by John McPhee about his long career as a journalist for The New...
The names of the contributors to this volume are enough to insure the distinguished character of the...
Law reviews have short memories. Other institutions count on long-term managers and well-kept files ...
In this first full-length study of McPhee, Michael Pearson argues that the writer successfully emplo...
Review of the book 'The journalist's guide to media law, 4th edition', by M. Pearson and M. Polden, ...
Reviews the book, Legal-Lay Communication: Textual Travels in the Law by C. Heffer, F. Rock and J. C...
This article reviews the book: “News 2.0 Can Journalism Survive the Internet?”, by Martin Hirst
Legal Writing: Getting It Right and Getting It Written is a legal writing aid that is in a class by ...
In an essay in the Texas Law Review not too long ago, Sandy Levinson lamented the degree to which la...
A review of Brian Artese\u27s Testimony on Trial: Conrad, James and the Contest for Modernism, publi...
The article reviews the book A Political History of Journalism, by Géraldine Muhlmann
Three professors from the University of North Dakota have blazed the path for addressing issues in ...
Science of Legal Method. Select Essays by Various Authors. Translation by Ernest Bruncken, Washingto...
Legal academics generally publish in student-edited journals that have no sole-submission requiremen...
John McPhee was born in Princeton, New Jersey, and was educated at Princeton University and Cambridg...