The article asserts that scholarly ideas matter more than form and that online supplement scholarship can be counted and valued for these institutional purposes
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
A case study for how to use digital object identifiers (DOIs) to make online journals more accessibl...
Major law publishers have begun producing ebook versions of some of the legal treatises they own. De...
The article asserts that scholarly ideas matter more than form and that online supplement scholarshi...
In this Article, the Author opines that the institution of the student-edited law review could no do...
A general debate concerning whether law blogs can be legal scholarship makes little more sense than ...
The following materials, modeled after the chart prepared by Professor Allen Rostron and Professor N...
Symposium: The Next Generation of Law School Rankings held April 15, 2005 at Indiana University Scho...
This essay presents a different vision of the future. Part I explains why law reviews might continue...
Law professors working at terminals with an Internet connection to the Web need not worry any more a...
This article asks the following question: should the average law professor, who works mightily to ch...
Although many of Professor Bernard J. Hibbitts\u27s criticisms of law reviews in the accompanying ar...
The article suggests that the legal academy is in a time of transition between promotion and tenure ...
The full-text version of this article1 offers a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from t...
Law reviews and legal journals have been part of the legal academic world for more than a cent...
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
A case study for how to use digital object identifiers (DOIs) to make online journals more accessibl...
Major law publishers have begun producing ebook versions of some of the legal treatises they own. De...
The article asserts that scholarly ideas matter more than form and that online supplement scholarshi...
In this Article, the Author opines that the institution of the student-edited law review could no do...
A general debate concerning whether law blogs can be legal scholarship makes little more sense than ...
The following materials, modeled after the chart prepared by Professor Allen Rostron and Professor N...
Symposium: The Next Generation of Law School Rankings held April 15, 2005 at Indiana University Scho...
This essay presents a different vision of the future. Part I explains why law reviews might continue...
Law professors working at terminals with an Internet connection to the Web need not worry any more a...
This article asks the following question: should the average law professor, who works mightily to ch...
Although many of Professor Bernard J. Hibbitts\u27s criticisms of law reviews in the accompanying ar...
The article suggests that the legal academy is in a time of transition between promotion and tenure ...
The full-text version of this article1 offers a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from t...
Law reviews and legal journals have been part of the legal academic world for more than a cent...
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
A case study for how to use digital object identifiers (DOIs) to make online journals more accessibl...
Major law publishers have begun producing ebook versions of some of the legal treatises they own. De...