January 2015 Law Student Top Blawgs
Law school blog and podcast from Canada.
Provides information for lawyers on space sharing arrangements.
Covers bar exams. By BARBRI.
Covers how associates should approach the practice of law. By Keith Lee.
By the Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review.
Blog of a LL.M law student in the UK.
A blawg by Albany Law School Professor Mary Lynch designed to be a useful web-based source of information on current reforms in legal education, and to create a place where people interested in the future of legal education can freely exchange ideas, concerns, and opinions.
Features posts and occasional symposia about law and law school.
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.
Explores the intersection of law and economics. By Joshua Sturtevant.
Covers emerging legal issues in IP, technology, commerce, and the arts. From the Washington Journal of Law, Technology & Arts.
Reviews recent scholarship in patent law, intellectual property theory, and innovation. By Christopher Suarez, Sarah Tran, and Tan Mau Wu.
Covers law, politics, and foreign policy by legal teachers, scholars, fellows and researchers.
Covers e-discovery issues by focusing on mistakes made by counsel, employers and employees.
Musings of a computer scientist turned law student. By T. Greg Doucette.
A blawg from Albany Law School's Diversity Office to engage all students, faculty and staff to create a community of inclusion and to have an open forum to address issues facing all of us.
Covers the quirks and quibbles in the law.
Covers limited government, freedom, federalism and judicial restraint.
Cardozo law student division of CRI founded by 2010 Cardozo graduates Danielle Goldstein and Benjamin Ryberg. CRI-Cardozo has over 40 student members and is dedicated to raising awareness about human rights abuses against children.