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Full-Text Articles in Law
Taking Note Of Notes: Student Legal Scholarship In Theory And Practice, Andrew Yaphe
Taking Note Of Notes: Student Legal Scholarship In Theory And Practice, Andrew Yaphe
Journal of Legal Education
No abstract provided.
Taxation, Craig D. Bell
Consent Theory As A Possible Cure For Unconscionable Terms In Student-Athlete Contracts, Thomas A. Baker Iii, John Grady, Jesse M. Rappole
Consent Theory As A Possible Cure For Unconscionable Terms In Student-Athlete Contracts, Thomas A. Baker Iii, John Grady, Jesse M. Rappole
Marquette Sports Law Review
None
The Most-Cited Law Review Articles Of All Time, Fred R. Shapiro, Michelle Pearse
The Most-Cited Law Review Articles Of All Time, Fred R. Shapiro, Michelle Pearse
Michigan Law Review
This Essay updates two well-known earlier studies (dated 1985 and 1996) by the first coauthor setting forth lists of the most-cited law review articles. New research tools from the HeinOnline and Web of Science databases now allow lists to be compiled that are more thorough and more accurate than anything previously possible. Tables printed here present the 100 most-cited legal articles of all time, the 100 most-cited articles of the last twenty years, and some additional rankings. Characteristics of the top-ranked publications, authors, and law schools are analyzed as are trends in schools of legal thought. Data from the all-time …
Becoming A Legal Scholar, Samuel W. Buell
Becoming A Legal Scholar, Samuel W. Buell
Michigan Law Review
What does it take to become a law professor? With the publication of Brannon Denning, Marcia McCormick, and Jeffrey Lipshaw's Becoming a Law Professor: A Candidate's Guide, we can now say-as academics do that there is a literature on this question. Previously, much of the advice on this topic consisted of postings to blogs and other websites, which comprise probably the most detailed set of writings law professors have created in that medium. The arrival of a monograph pulls this body of advice together, organizes it, adds substantially to it, and supplies a handy tool for the kit of any …
The Problem Of Policing, Rachel A. Harmon
The Problem Of Policing, Rachel A. Harmon
Michigan Law Review
The legal problem of policing is how to regulate police authority to permit officers to enforce law while also protecting individual liberty and minimizing the social costs the police impose. Courts and commentators have largely treated the problem of policing as limited to preventing violations of constitutional rights and its solution as the judicial definition and enforcement of those rights. But constitutional law and courts alone are necessarily inadequate to regulate the police. Constitutional law does not protect important interests below the constitutional threshold or effectively address the distributional impacts of law enforcement activities. Nor can the judiciary adequately assess …
Education Hb 326, Georgia State University Law Review
Education Hb 326, Georgia State University Law Review
Georgia State University Law Review
No abstract provided.
Bargaining Without Law, Robert J. Condlin