July 2012 Constitutional Law Top Blawgs
By Eugene Volokh, Dale Carpenter, David Kopel, David Bernstein, David Post, Erik Jaffe, Ilya Somin, Jim Lindgren, Jonathan Adler, Kevan Choset, Orin Kerr, Randy Barnett, Russell Korobkin, Sasha Volokh, Stuart Benjamin, Todd Zywicki & Tyler Cowen.
Covers the Supreme Court of the United States. By Bloomberg Law.
By University of Miami law professor Michael Froomkin. Covers civil liberties, the Internet, Guantanamo, Iraq attrocities, politics and more.
Covers civil rights and constitutional law. From the ACLU.
By Yale Law School Professor Jack M. Balkin.
By University of Toledo College of Law Professor Howard M. Friedman.
Edited by University of Miami School of Law Professor Michael Froomkin, The Journal of Things We Like (Lots)–JOTWELL–invites law professors to join us in filling a telling gap in legal scholarship by creating a space where legal academics will go to identify, celebrate, and discuss the best new legal scholarship.
Left-leaning, social justice-minded slant on law and justice issues, the death penalty, politics, and current events.
By Cornell Law School Professor Michael Dorf and his friends.
Listen to lectures by and discussions with the faculty of the University of Chicago Law School.
Provides commentary on criminal law, civil liberties and jurisprudence. By Jeffrey Gamso.
Covers constitutional law, copyright/technology, corporate law, criminal law, free speech, genetic testing, international law, national security and more.
Features art and cultural heritage law resources and reviews.
Covers constitutional law, criminal law, DUI, drugs, First Amendment and immigration. By Jon Katz, P.C.
Provides commentary on law, politics and justice. By Professor Darren Hutchinson.
Covers constitutional law and jurisprudence (in Spanish). Features legal news, cases and commentaries from Argentina, U.S. and the Americas.
Covers condemnation and real estate law. By David B. Snyder of Fox Rothschild, LLP.
Covers criminal law, DUI and civil rights. By Peterson Law Offices.
Covers the First Amendment, democracy and design in the digital age. By New York Law School Professor Beth Simone Noveck and members of the First Amendment in the Digital Age Course at Stanford University.