Ms. Whisner begins a year of exploring how legal scholarship citation counts are created and viewed. What works do authors actually cite? Which legal sources are included? She shares her findings here
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...
In this second installment examining citation studies, Ms. Whisner looks at citation patterns of art...
In this third installment examining citation studies, Ms. Whisner looks at five articles from each o...
This article analyzes the determinants of citations to pieces published from 1980 to 1995 in Harvard...
Recent pedagogical, economic, and technological changes require law schools to reevaluate their reso...
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
In this article, we demonstrate that the citation counts and other author information available thro...
An empirical study of the judicial and law journal citation frequencies for a large and comprehensiv...
Citation literacy is the ability to read and write citations.[1] That’s it. The rest of this artic...
Academic legal writing is known for extensive citation. Generally, scholars who study citation pract...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consid...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...
In this second installment examining citation studies, Ms. Whisner looks at citation patterns of art...
In this third installment examining citation studies, Ms. Whisner looks at five articles from each o...
This article analyzes the determinants of citations to pieces published from 1980 to 1995 in Harvard...
Recent pedagogical, economic, and technological changes require law schools to reevaluate their reso...
Part I of this article examines the proportion of reported opinions from U.S. federal and state cour...
In this article, we demonstrate that the citation counts and other author information available thro...
An empirical study of the judicial and law journal citation frequencies for a large and comprehensiv...
Citation literacy is the ability to read and write citations.[1] That’s it. The rest of this artic...
Academic legal writing is known for extensive citation. Generally, scholars who study citation pract...
This article looks at the phenomenon of legal citation and its unintended consequences. After consid...
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in...
Prevailing citation practice in law journals is to use uniform resource locators (URLs) when citing ...
This article discusses and analyzes the legal authorities that the Montana Supreme Court relies on i...
This study provides an empirical, practical measure of the citation practices of the two highest cou...
Working with citations is a fact of life on law journals. Because citation work is detail-oriented, ...