(Excerpt)Contract-drafting courses are gaining in popularity in law school, and they are a pleasure to teach. On July 20–21, 2005,Northwestern University School of Law provided the location and Judith A. Rosenbaum provided on-site assistance in hosting the first national conference, in recent times, on the topic of contract drafting. The conference was aptly called “Teaching Contract Drafting.” Approximately 100 participants attended, which was significantly more than the organizers expected. The conference’s large attendance indicates the need and growing enthusiasm for guidance on how to develop and teach contract drafting courses. The organizers of the conference, Susan Irion, Richard Neumann, and Tina Stark, designed the sessions to cov...
(Excerpt) First-year legal writing students always plead for model examples of the types of writing ...
This is Volume 2 in a three volume series written for Contracts Law. Its orginal title was Collabor...
Every day lawyers sit with fingers curled above keyboards and pens poised above notepads. Lawyers ar...
(Excerpt)Contract-drafting courses are gaining in popularity in law school, and they are a pleasure ...
This short article is based on a talk at Emory Law School on Transactional Lawyering. One overall pe...
It is by now almost a commonplace to say that the first year of law school should include skills-foc...
In February 2006, I participated in the Symposium, Teaching Writing and Teaching Doctrine: A Symbiot...
This book brings contract law to life through contemporary problems to help students build a skill s...
This book brings contract law to life through contemporary problems to help students build a skill s...
Reimagining Contract Law Pedagogy examines why existing contract teaching pedagogy has remained in p...
The student cannot be taught what he needs to know, but he can be coached: 'He has to see on his ow...
This creative and original book is designed for use in three ways. It can supplement a traditional S...
For centuries, lawyers have been notorious for long-winded writing filled with legalese, hyper-techn...
An introductory law school course in contract law should at the outset provide students with some ge...
This article describes the fundamentals of contract drafting. It begins by discussing the basic elem...
(Excerpt) First-year legal writing students always plead for model examples of the types of writing ...
This is Volume 2 in a three volume series written for Contracts Law. Its orginal title was Collabor...
Every day lawyers sit with fingers curled above keyboards and pens poised above notepads. Lawyers ar...
(Excerpt)Contract-drafting courses are gaining in popularity in law school, and they are a pleasure ...
This short article is based on a talk at Emory Law School on Transactional Lawyering. One overall pe...
It is by now almost a commonplace to say that the first year of law school should include skills-foc...
In February 2006, I participated in the Symposium, Teaching Writing and Teaching Doctrine: A Symbiot...
This book brings contract law to life through contemporary problems to help students build a skill s...
This book brings contract law to life through contemporary problems to help students build a skill s...
Reimagining Contract Law Pedagogy examines why existing contract teaching pedagogy has remained in p...
The student cannot be taught what he needs to know, but he can be coached: 'He has to see on his ow...
This creative and original book is designed for use in three ways. It can supplement a traditional S...
For centuries, lawyers have been notorious for long-winded writing filled with legalese, hyper-techn...
An introductory law school course in contract law should at the outset provide students with some ge...
This article describes the fundamentals of contract drafting. It begins by discussing the basic elem...
(Excerpt) First-year legal writing students always plead for model examples of the types of writing ...
This is Volume 2 in a three volume series written for Contracts Law. Its orginal title was Collabor...
Every day lawyers sit with fingers curled above keyboards and pens poised above notepads. Lawyers ar...