This article examines how blogging has developed and considers the ethics of blogging and its impact on the legal profession. It examines blog entries from lawyers, law professors and law students and suggests that the rules of the Bar may be colliding with the manner of online storytelling occurring by legal professionals. The article takes an in-depth look at how blogging has impacted legal education and the relationship between faculty and students. It proposes ways in which incorporating blogging assignments into law school courses can assist students in developing ethical story-telling on web logs
Social media, and blogs specifically, can potentially have a dual raison d'être: enriching a law stu...
Commenting on the papers by Doug Berman Lawrence Solumn, this paper raises questions concerning the ...
The Internet is experiencing explosive growth. The global World Wide Web and Internet are being embr...
This article examines how blogging has developed and considers the ethics of blogging and its impact...
The rise in blogs (short for Web-logs ) has spawned a new world of considerations for lawyers and c...
Legal blogging – academic, professional, journalistic – carved out its space among blogs in the vari...
Over the past decade the use of blogs as a new communication technology has rapidly expanded. Today,...
The literature chronicles an ongoing debate about the teaching–research nexus in higher education. T...
Over the past decade the use of blogs as a new communication technology has rapidly expanded. Today,...
Attorneys are, in a sense, their own gatekeepers. Like many professions, the legal profession is sel...
This article describes, evaluates and reflects upon online team-based creation of a storyboard and s...
Does blogging have anything to do with legal scholarship? Could blogging transform the legal acade...
This Article examines how Facebook posts can be used to teach professionalism and professional respo...
Social media, and blogs specifically, can potentially have a dual raison d'etre: enriching a law stu...
The use of the internet by attorneys - through websites, social networking, and blogging - has incre...
Social media, and blogs specifically, can potentially have a dual raison d'être: enriching a law stu...
Commenting on the papers by Doug Berman Lawrence Solumn, this paper raises questions concerning the ...
The Internet is experiencing explosive growth. The global World Wide Web and Internet are being embr...
This article examines how blogging has developed and considers the ethics of blogging and its impact...
The rise in blogs (short for Web-logs ) has spawned a new world of considerations for lawyers and c...
Legal blogging – academic, professional, journalistic – carved out its space among blogs in the vari...
Over the past decade the use of blogs as a new communication technology has rapidly expanded. Today,...
The literature chronicles an ongoing debate about the teaching–research nexus in higher education. T...
Over the past decade the use of blogs as a new communication technology has rapidly expanded. Today,...
Attorneys are, in a sense, their own gatekeepers. Like many professions, the legal profession is sel...
This article describes, evaluates and reflects upon online team-based creation of a storyboard and s...
Does blogging have anything to do with legal scholarship? Could blogging transform the legal acade...
This Article examines how Facebook posts can be used to teach professionalism and professional respo...
Social media, and blogs specifically, can potentially have a dual raison d'etre: enriching a law stu...
The use of the internet by attorneys - through websites, social networking, and blogging - has incre...
Social media, and blogs specifically, can potentially have a dual raison d'être: enriching a law stu...
Commenting on the papers by Doug Berman Lawrence Solumn, this paper raises questions concerning the ...
The Internet is experiencing explosive growth. The global World Wide Web and Internet are being embr...