(Version 1.0, Feb. 5, 1996)\ud This article - the original version of which was published on the author’s website in February 1996, possibly making it the first scholarly article posted online by a law professor before print publication - undertakes a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from the perspective of the present age of cyberspace. In Part I, I investigate the conditions that initially joined to generate the form, showing how the law review emerged in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries as the product of the fortuitous interaction of academic circumstances and improvements in publishing technology. In Part II, I trace the course that criticism of the law review has taken since the institution's debut, showin...
Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so that subsequ...
This article asks the following question: should the average law professor, who works mightily to ch...
The details vary from law review to law review, but typically, an accepted article is edited three t...
This article reassesses the history and future of the law review in light of changing technological ...
This article responds to a series of commentaries on my 1996 Web-posted article Last Writes? Re-asse...
The full-text version of this article1 offers a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from t...
This essay presents a different vision of the future. Part I explains why law reviews might continue...
Let me begin by congratulating the Marquette Law Review on reaching the threshold of its 100th anniv...
Professor Hibbitts\u27s review of the history of law reviews was interesting. For me, the most notab...
I am honored to write this essay on the state of Internet law to commemorate the twentieth anniversa...
Very few people are happy at present with the law review publishing process, from article submission...
This article considers the future of scholarly electronic journals (or ejournals) in the light of th...
The increase in technology gives rise to an interesting discussion on whether the way lawyers approa...
What a year! While it has only been ten months since we published our first issue, the progress made...
Law professors working at terminals with an Internet connection to the Web need not worry any more a...
Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so that subsequ...
This article asks the following question: should the average law professor, who works mightily to ch...
The details vary from law review to law review, but typically, an accepted article is edited three t...
This article reassesses the history and future of the law review in light of changing technological ...
This article responds to a series of commentaries on my 1996 Web-posted article Last Writes? Re-asse...
The full-text version of this article1 offers a comprehensive re-assessment of the law review from t...
This essay presents a different vision of the future. Part I explains why law reviews might continue...
Let me begin by congratulating the Marquette Law Review on reaching the threshold of its 100th anniv...
Professor Hibbitts\u27s review of the history of law reviews was interesting. For me, the most notab...
I am honored to write this essay on the state of Internet law to commemorate the twentieth anniversa...
Very few people are happy at present with the law review publishing process, from article submission...
This article considers the future of scholarly electronic journals (or ejournals) in the light of th...
The increase in technology gives rise to an interesting discussion on whether the way lawyers approa...
What a year! While it has only been ten months since we published our first issue, the progress made...
Law professors working at terminals with an Internet connection to the Web need not worry any more a...
Scholarship, including legal scholarship, depends on the reliability of sources used so that subsequ...
This article asks the following question: should the average law professor, who works mightily to ch...
The details vary from law review to law review, but typically, an accepted article is edited three t...