December 2024 Law Professor Top Blawgs
Coveres actions taken or contemplated to protect the nation interact with the nation’s laws and legal institutions, including cybersecurity, Guantánamo habeas litigation, targeted killing, biosecurity, universal jurisdiction, the Alien Tort Statute, and the state secrets privilege. By Benjamin Wittes, Jack Goldsmith and Robert Chesney.
Covers false advertising and intellectual property issues. By Professor Rebecca Tushnet.
Covers emerging empirical legal scholarship, conference updates and empirical claims. By Carolyn Shapiro, Christopher Zorn, Dawn M. Chutkow, and Michael Heise.
Edited by Gerry W. Beyer.
By Paul L. Caron.
Covers law, politics, and foreign policy by legal teachers, scholars, fellows and researchers.
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.
By University of Miami law professor Michael Froomkin. Covers civil liberties, the Internet, Guantanamo, Iraq attrocities, politics and more.
Edited by D. Daniel Sokol.
By Kevin R. Johnson, Bill O. Hing, Kit Johnson, Ingrid Eagly, Ming Hsu Chen and Austin Kocher.
Covers global poverty, welfare and current affairs. By Professor Ezra Rosser.
A Canadian cooperative weblog on all things legal.
Covers Internet, technology and online marketing legal issues. Published by Santa Clara University School of Law Professor Eric Goldman and Venkat Balasubramani.
Just as knowledge and experience is the result of communities of learners working together, outstanding teaching is the result of educators working together to share ideas, experience and know-how to construct learning opportunities. This blog is all about providing an opportunity to share the expertise and ideas about law teaching among law teachers to foster outstanding law teaching.
Covers governance in higher education and in law firms, bankruptcy ethics, popular culture and the law, Enron and other corporate fiascos, and professional responsibility generally. By Nancy Rapoport, a law professor at UNLV's Boyd School of Law.
By Christine A. Corcos.
About law, literature and the humanities. By Christine Corcos and Daniel J. Solove.
Covers law, rights and national security. Based at the Reiss Center on Law and Security at New York University School of Law.
Covers tax law, legal education, the First Amendment, religion, and law generally. By Villanova law professor James Edward Maule.
Features observations on technology, law and lawlessness. By University of Dayton Susan Brenner.