These are precarious times in which to launch a new law school and a new law review. Yet here we are. The University of Massachusetts is now in its first year of operation with provisional ABA accreditation. This text is a foreword to the first general-interest issue of the University of Massachusetts Law Review. Now marks an appropriate time to take stock of what these institutions mean to accomplish in our unsettled legal world
When the author began teaching at the Chicago-Kent College of Law in 1982, it was publishing at grea...
The author describes the common law as a machine, with judges and lawyers as its working parts. He...
In the preface to the first issue of the AKRON LAW REVIEW, I observed that the law review that serv...
These are precarious times in which to launch a new law school and a new law review. Yet here we are...
Law Journals have been under heavy criticism for as long as we can remember. The criticisms come fro...
In this Article, the Author reflects on legal education and the role of law reviews. Law reviews not...
Law Journals have been under heavy criticism for as long as we can remember. The criticisms come fro...
When I began teaching at the University of Massachusetts in August 2012, one of my first encounters ...
In this Article, the Author reflects on legal education and the role of law reviews. Law reviews not...
In an essay in the Texas Law Review not too long ago, Sandy Levinson lamented the degree to which la...
The introduction to the issue discusses the history of UMass Law Review and its contribution to lega...
Science of Legal Method. Select Essays by Various Authors. Translation by Ernest Bruncken, Washingto...
It is my privilege to offer this brief foreword for the inaugural issue of the Canadian Journal of C...
Professors Kennedy and Fisher have put together a book containing twenty essays, most of them first ...
Congratulations to the Law Review for its first thirty years and many thanks to each and every gradu...
When the author began teaching at the Chicago-Kent College of Law in 1982, it was publishing at grea...
The author describes the common law as a machine, with judges and lawyers as its working parts. He...
In the preface to the first issue of the AKRON LAW REVIEW, I observed that the law review that serv...
These are precarious times in which to launch a new law school and a new law review. Yet here we are...
Law Journals have been under heavy criticism for as long as we can remember. The criticisms come fro...
In this Article, the Author reflects on legal education and the role of law reviews. Law reviews not...
Law Journals have been under heavy criticism for as long as we can remember. The criticisms come fro...
When I began teaching at the University of Massachusetts in August 2012, one of my first encounters ...
In this Article, the Author reflects on legal education and the role of law reviews. Law reviews not...
In an essay in the Texas Law Review not too long ago, Sandy Levinson lamented the degree to which la...
The introduction to the issue discusses the history of UMass Law Review and its contribution to lega...
Science of Legal Method. Select Essays by Various Authors. Translation by Ernest Bruncken, Washingto...
It is my privilege to offer this brief foreword for the inaugural issue of the Canadian Journal of C...
Professors Kennedy and Fisher have put together a book containing twenty essays, most of them first ...
Congratulations to the Law Review for its first thirty years and many thanks to each and every gradu...
When the author began teaching at the Chicago-Kent College of Law in 1982, it was publishing at grea...
The author describes the common law as a machine, with judges and lawyers as its working parts. He...
In the preface to the first issue of the AKRON LAW REVIEW, I observed that the law review that serv...