This essay unpacks the regulatory comment letter process and how to incorporate it into the law school curriculum. Participating in live rulemaking offers unique opportunities for students, from mastering the substantive area of law, developing critical thinking skills, and developing their professional identities and expertise. We describe our own experiences in incorporating students into the regulatory rulemaking process. Because of our focus on securities law, our students review and comment on proposed actions by securities regulators — the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) and Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). After providing an overview of the pedagogical and practical rationale for incorporating the securiti...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
This Article is the transcript of a panel presented at Emory’s Third Biennial Conference on Transact...
Thank you for the honor of speaking at this annual dinner, and I would like to commend Professor Car...
Professor Benjamin Edwards joins his colleague, Professor Nicole Iannarone, in this essay, unpacking...
The teaching of administrative law has grown increasingly vital in light of the U.S. regulatory stat...
If you are reading these words on RegBlog, you have already discovered the innovation in legal educa...
Every day lawyers sit with fingers curled above keyboards and pens poised above notepads. Lawyers ar...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...
A quick skim of daily headlines shows the breadth of regulatory law, from recommendations to limit t...
This article joins a growing body of scholarship on the pedagogy of transactional law and skills. Th...
Comment letter filed on Sept. 24, 2019. File No. S7-08-19 We are fifteen law professors whose sch...
When I was in law school in the late 1990s, my classmates and I received the message that legal empl...
Those of us teaching the Business Associations course in law schools are almost universally presente...
This essay — part of a special journal issue on Legislation and Regulation and Regulatory State cour...
The article advocates including drafting and transactional courses in Legal Writing programs to bett...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
This Article is the transcript of a panel presented at Emory’s Third Biennial Conference on Transact...
Thank you for the honor of speaking at this annual dinner, and I would like to commend Professor Car...
Professor Benjamin Edwards joins his colleague, Professor Nicole Iannarone, in this essay, unpacking...
The teaching of administrative law has grown increasingly vital in light of the U.S. regulatory stat...
If you are reading these words on RegBlog, you have already discovered the innovation in legal educa...
Every day lawyers sit with fingers curled above keyboards and pens poised above notepads. Lawyers ar...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...
A quick skim of daily headlines shows the breadth of regulatory law, from recommendations to limit t...
This article joins a growing body of scholarship on the pedagogy of transactional law and skills. Th...
Comment letter filed on Sept. 24, 2019. File No. S7-08-19 We are fifteen law professors whose sch...
When I was in law school in the late 1990s, my classmates and I received the message that legal empl...
Those of us teaching the Business Associations course in law schools are almost universally presente...
This essay — part of a special journal issue on Legislation and Regulation and Regulatory State cour...
The article advocates including drafting and transactional courses in Legal Writing programs to bett...
The article first examines the politics of curricular reform. Before a law school will be able to in...
This Article is the transcript of a panel presented at Emory’s Third Biennial Conference on Transact...
Thank you for the honor of speaking at this annual dinner, and I would like to commend Professor Car...