Looking back on forty-five years of law review writing, Professor Kamisar concludes that, to use George Orwell\u27s words, he has been moved to write by a sense of injustice and the need to expose some lie, e.g., the lie that the trial judge or the prosecuting attorney can be counted on to protect the rights of unrepresented defendants. He maintains further that law professors generally should feel an obligation to write because they can think through and research exhaustively any and every problem they meet along the way without worrying about billable hours and they can do so under working conditions that thousands of busy, hurried practitioners would envy
Many law professors utilize the Socratic method in their teaching, presumably because wisdom is to b...
There is a tendency to view scholarly writing by law students as an exercise that has little utility...
The life of the legal writing professor in today’s law schools is a challenging yet rewarding one. O...
Looking back on forty-five years of law review writing, Professor Kamisar concludes that, to use Geo...
As my colleague James Boyd White has observed, It may look as though we are all doing the same thing...
This wonderful collection of reviews of leading recent books about law provides the occasion to ask ...
What is the purpose of legal scholarship? The foreword to the University of Michigan Law Review\u27s...
You\u27ve made it onto a law faculty, and you\u27re wondering what to do. Teaching obviously isn\u27...
Criticism of legal writing has come with increasing frequency and stridency in recent years from law...
Why do law professors continue to produce scholarship even after achieving tenure? This essay, pres...
It is a great honor for me to speak to you on this occasion, celebrating the publication of such an ...
Many people, including many lawyers and judges, disparage law reviews and the books that sometimes r...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This article explores the many institutionalized obstacles placed in the paths of the legal academy\...
Perhaps because the field of legal writing has now matured enough so that we professors constitute a...
Many law professors utilize the Socratic method in their teaching, presumably because wisdom is to b...
There is a tendency to view scholarly writing by law students as an exercise that has little utility...
The life of the legal writing professor in today’s law schools is a challenging yet rewarding one. O...
Looking back on forty-five years of law review writing, Professor Kamisar concludes that, to use Geo...
As my colleague James Boyd White has observed, It may look as though we are all doing the same thing...
This wonderful collection of reviews of leading recent books about law provides the occasion to ask ...
What is the purpose of legal scholarship? The foreword to the University of Michigan Law Review\u27s...
You\u27ve made it onto a law faculty, and you\u27re wondering what to do. Teaching obviously isn\u27...
Criticism of legal writing has come with increasing frequency and stridency in recent years from law...
Why do law professors continue to produce scholarship even after achieving tenure? This essay, pres...
It is a great honor for me to speak to you on this occasion, celebrating the publication of such an ...
Many people, including many lawyers and judges, disparage law reviews and the books that sometimes r...
Despite some imperfections across disciplines, advice from well-known fiction and non-fiction writer...
This article explores the many institutionalized obstacles placed in the paths of the legal academy\...
Perhaps because the field of legal writing has now matured enough so that we professors constitute a...
Many law professors utilize the Socratic method in their teaching, presumably because wisdom is to b...
There is a tendency to view scholarly writing by law students as an exercise that has little utility...
The life of the legal writing professor in today’s law schools is a challenging yet rewarding one. O...