Success in law school and in the legal profession often involves mastering and navigating the plethora of unwritten rules and norms that govern institutions and communities. Differences in access to those unwritten rules can privilege and advance some while disadvantaging others. A second-generation law student, for example, is far more likely to know about the professional value of law review than a first-generation law student. Law scholarship is particularly plagued by an insularity that can yield a problematic echo chamber within elite institutions and privileged communities. Thus, the more legal scholarship can be explicitly demystified, taught, and mentored, the more inclusive the scholarly community might become
The current structure of law reviews is deeply problematic. It does not serve students, law faculty,...
I review Eugene Volokh's recent book, Academic Legal Writing. The book is nominally directed to law ...
In this Article, the Author opines that the institution of the student-edited law review could no do...
I review Eugene Volokh's recent book, Academic Legal Writing. The book is nominally directed to law ...
There is now a literature on how to become a law professor. The first book-length treatment of the s...
There is now a literature on how to become a law professor. The first book-length treatment of the s...
Many people, including many lawyers and judges, disparage law reviews and the books that sometimes r...
Scholarship is the work-product of scholars. The word derives the Latin schola, as in school. Hence,...
Academic critics contend that legal scholarship is overly argumentative or too “normative,” simply s...
A general debate concerning whether law blogs can be legal scholarship makes little more sense than ...
This Article is aimed primarily at guiding current law review members through a process that explore...
The article explores a way in which law schools can level the field of student admission in order to...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
In the beginning, there was law. Then came law-and. Law and society, law and economics, law and hist...
The current structure of law reviews is deeply problematic. It does not serve students, law faculty,...
I review Eugene Volokh's recent book, Academic Legal Writing. The book is nominally directed to law ...
In this Article, the Author opines that the institution of the student-edited law review could no do...
I review Eugene Volokh's recent book, Academic Legal Writing. The book is nominally directed to law ...
There is now a literature on how to become a law professor. The first book-length treatment of the s...
There is now a literature on how to become a law professor. The first book-length treatment of the s...
Many people, including many lawyers and judges, disparage law reviews and the books that sometimes r...
Scholarship is the work-product of scholars. The word derives the Latin schola, as in school. Hence,...
Academic critics contend that legal scholarship is overly argumentative or too “normative,” simply s...
A general debate concerning whether law blogs can be legal scholarship makes little more sense than ...
This Article is aimed primarily at guiding current law review members through a process that explore...
The article explores a way in which law schools can level the field of student admission in order to...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
Law has been a borrower but not a supplier. Law schools, in effect, have been located on one-way str...
In the beginning, there was law. Then came law-and. Law and society, law and economics, law and hist...
The current structure of law reviews is deeply problematic. It does not serve students, law faculty,...
I review Eugene Volokh's recent book, Academic Legal Writing. The book is nominally directed to law ...
In this Article, the Author opines that the institution of the student-edited law review could no do...