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Articles 31 - 38 of 38
Full-Text Articles in Legal Writing and Research
Bibliography Of Principal Publications By Professor John H. Jackson As Of February 1999, Michigan Journal Of International Law
Bibliography Of Principal Publications By Professor John H. Jackson As Of February 1999, Michigan Journal Of International Law
Michigan Journal of International Law
A bibliography.
Introduction And Dedication, J. Thomas Sullivan
Introduction And Dedication, J. Thomas Sullivan
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process, introduction
The Uncertain Status Of Citation Reform: An Update For The Undecided, Coleen M. Barger
The Uncertain Status Of Citation Reform: An Update For The Undecided, Coleen M. Barger
The Journal of Appellate Practice and Process
This article addresses the purpose of legal citations and presents a case for reforming citations in order to better fulfill the purposes of legal citations.
Critiquing And Evaluating Law Students' Writing: Advice From Thirty-Five Experts, Anne Enquist
Critiquing And Evaluating Law Students' Writing: Advice From Thirty-Five Experts, Anne Enquist
Seattle University Law Review
While there are some differences of opinion about what is the best way to comment on and grade law students' writing, a consensus seems to be developing based on the experience and insights of those in the profession who have done the job the longest and survived to tell about it. To help articulate this consensus, I selected thirty-seven experienced legal writing professors and asked them to respond to a questionnaire about critiquing and evaluating law students' writing. My goal was to gather and record their wisdom, insights, and experience for other legal writing professors, particularly those who are new …
The Richness Of Contract Theory, Randy E. Barnett
The Richness Of Contract Theory, Randy E. Barnett
Michigan Law Review
When I teach the doctrine of good faith performance, I assign an exchange between two distinguished contracts scholars, Robert Summers and Steven Burton, that has come to be known as the "Summers-Burton" debate. This debate is interesting not only for the contrasting views of its protagonists concerning the doctrine of good faith, but also because of the generational shift in modes of scholarship it represents. In the 1950s and 1960s, contracts scholars, like so many others, rejected so-called "conceptualist" or "formalist" approaches that attempted to dictate the outcome of cases with general concepts and rules. Contracts scholarship was dominated by …
Introduction: Critical Race Praxis And Legal Scholarship, Keith Aoki, Margaret Chon
Introduction: Critical Race Praxis And Legal Scholarship, Keith Aoki, Margaret Chon
Michigan Journal of Race and Law
The publication of this symposium issue is an occasion for three distinct and yet related celebrations. First, we honor the Western Law Teachers of Color, whose sixth annual meeting on the sublime Oregon Coast in 1998 provided the occasion for organizing the papers published here. Dean Strickland's preface, as well as Professors Linda Greene's and Jim Jones's essays examine the historical significance of this occasion in greater detail. Second, we engage in a festschrift of a particular member of this group-Professor Eric K. Yamamoto -whose publication of a book this year is a significant capstone to fifteen years of scholarship …
Apparently Substantial, Oddly Hollow: The Enigmatic Practice Of Justice, Heidi Li Feldman
Apparently Substantial, Oddly Hollow: The Enigmatic Practice Of Justice, Heidi Li Feldman
Michigan Law Review
The Practice of Justice: A Theory of Lawyers' Ethics, by William H. Simon, is one of the most thoughtful and important books in legal theory - not just legal ethics - published in the past ten years. Like David Luban's seminal contribution to legal ethics, Lawyers and Justice: An Ethical Study, published a decade ago, Simon's book is a deliberate rival to accounts of lawyers' professional responsibility that begin with a command to zealous advocacy, end with a prohibition on outright illegal conduct, and offer nothing in between. Authors and commentators have grown increasingly dissatisfied with this as the basic …
Direct Democracy In America, Sherman J. Clark
Direct Democracy In America, Sherman J. Clark
Michigan Law Review
The phrase "laboratories of democracy," as applied to the states, seems most often to mean something more like "democratic laboratories" - democratic testing grounds for various approaches to social problems. What sort of welfare reform will be most effective? Let Wisconsin try out Plan A, while Michigan experiments with Plan B. What combination of tort liability rules will achieve desired levels of compensation and deterrence? Let the states experiment with strict liability, comparative negligence, or various nofault schemes. It is also true, however, that the states are literally laboratories of democracy - arenas in which democratic institutions are themselves experimented …