A DEAN of my acquaintance is fond of saying that every law school courseshould be a course in jurisprudence. No one ever put this precept into practicemore fully than Frank Coker.Somehow, as our mutual colleague Leon Lipson once observed, Frank\u27sjurisprudence rode unusually close to the surface. Between his most specificstatement and the most general philosophic premises underlying the statementthere was a minimum of intermediate steps. And the few connecting linksrequired were made to seem simple, even apparent. Frank\u27s mind was elegant,in the sense that a great mathematical proof is elegant
This exploratory essay is an admixture of amateur psychology, moral theory, and jurisprudence. It gr...
It is quite possible that Judge Frank regarded his analysis of the disturbing role of Fact Finding ...
I am delighted and honored to participate in this symposium critiquing and celebrating the remarkabl...
A Dean of my acquaintance is fond of saying that every law school course should be a course in juris...
Frank Coker was a first-rate man, a first-rate lawyer, and a first-rate teacher. I have known a good...
Frank Allen had all of the wonderful talents that Ted St. Antoine and Rick Lempert ascribe to him. H...
Frank Allen was dean of the University of Michigan Law School when a junior appointment was offered ...
An invitation to participate in a special issue for such an inestimable personage as Francis Allen i...
The pages of a law journal are ill adapted to express the sense of bitter tragedy and irreparable pe...
Professors Kennedy and Fisher have put together a book containing twenty essays, most of them first ...
Francis Allen was the Dean who hired me. First deans are, in their own way, as memorable as first ki...
When teaching law to students is to be done, the professor\u27s lot is not a happy one. W.S. Gilbert...
Frank Allen began his distinguished teaching career more than thirty-five years ago - at a time when...
Writing a brief tribute to Frank Allen, a man I admire as much as any I have known, should have been...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
This exploratory essay is an admixture of amateur psychology, moral theory, and jurisprudence. It gr...
It is quite possible that Judge Frank regarded his analysis of the disturbing role of Fact Finding ...
I am delighted and honored to participate in this symposium critiquing and celebrating the remarkabl...
A Dean of my acquaintance is fond of saying that every law school course should be a course in juris...
Frank Coker was a first-rate man, a first-rate lawyer, and a first-rate teacher. I have known a good...
Frank Allen had all of the wonderful talents that Ted St. Antoine and Rick Lempert ascribe to him. H...
Frank Allen was dean of the University of Michigan Law School when a junior appointment was offered ...
An invitation to participate in a special issue for such an inestimable personage as Francis Allen i...
The pages of a law journal are ill adapted to express the sense of bitter tragedy and irreparable pe...
Professors Kennedy and Fisher have put together a book containing twenty essays, most of them first ...
Francis Allen was the Dean who hired me. First deans are, in their own way, as memorable as first ki...
When teaching law to students is to be done, the professor\u27s lot is not a happy one. W.S. Gilbert...
Frank Allen began his distinguished teaching career more than thirty-five years ago - at a time when...
Writing a brief tribute to Frank Allen, a man I admire as much as any I have known, should have been...
The simplification and socialization of law is frustrated by the stand-alone JD which accommodates s...
This exploratory essay is an admixture of amateur psychology, moral theory, and jurisprudence. It gr...
It is quite possible that Judge Frank regarded his analysis of the disturbing role of Fact Finding ...
I am delighted and honored to participate in this symposium critiquing and celebrating the remarkabl...