UK Law Student Blogs
Just a sampling of UK law student blogs from this interesting corner of the blogosphere.
Diaries of UK Law Students is a group blog containing the "the thoughts and ramblings" of UK law students trying to make it to qualification. The students are all at different stages of that journey.
See also:
- Lost London Law Student
- Barrister 2 b
- Legal Lass
- Legally Blonde in London
- and my favorite, Asp Bites: The Random Meandering of a Law Student.
[JH]
February 29, 2008 in Law Student Blogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Oregon Law Students Create Online Journal to Combat Legal Inscrutability
From the press release:
The Legality is the combined forces of eleven second-year law students at the University of Oregon. The site launched February 4th, and has already simplified complex events like the Hollywood Writer’s Strike, the Scrabulous Copyright Infringement Claims, and Police Search and Seizure. The site targets potential law students, lawyers who want to read analysis in various areas of law, the intellectually curious, and the media (who may be looking for depth on a story). Unlike traditional paper journals which can take more than a year to publish articles, The Legality’s coverage of popular events is made possible by a quick turnaround. Each week a topic in the public eye is selected, and over the course of four days the team assembles a comprehensive legal analysis in a style accessible even to those unfamiliar with the law.
The Legality updates three times each week with original content. New main articles are posted each Wednesday.
[JH]
February 14, 2008 in Law Student Blogs | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack
Summer Clinical Students Blog on Montana Public Interest Law
The Summer Clinical Students at The University of Montana School of Law blogged for the general public on a variety of legal issues. Check out Montana Public Interest Law. [JH]
August 22, 2007 in Law Student Blogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Blogs Ranking Law Schools
Yes, there's an alternative to the US News rankings. Read more about it in this Wall Street Journal article which features a blogger and Notre Dame Law School graduate who goes by the name "law firm addict." The blogger invited students to share figures on school representation in law firms' summer-associate programs as well as where federal appeals clerks went to school. The information is posted on lawclerkaddict.blogspot.com and lawfirmaddict.blogspot.com. See also The Alternative Law-School Ranking Scene. [JH]
July 12, 2007 in Law Student Blogs | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack
Hudson v. Michigan Blog Update
A month ago I wrote a post entitled Where is the Hudson v. Michigan Blog – A Suggestion for Law Students. Here are some subsequent developments, which demonstrate three benefits of blogging: further blogospheric conversations, helpful comments from readers, and interaction with those involved in the actual case:
1. Several blogs discussed my idea further, including:
- Corrections Sentencing: Case Blogging
- Human Law: Where is the Hudson v. Michigan Blog?
- Judging Crimes: Where Indeed?
- Transnational Law Blog: Now is the Time for Law Students to Become Pioneers in the Legal Blogosphere
2. One commenter to the original post added this thread from SCOTUSBlog to my two examples of blogs discussing Hudson v. Michigan.
3. David A. Moran, an attorney who argued the case of Hudson v. Michigan before the Supreme Court, commented to my post. He pointed out that he had written an article on Hudson for the Cato Supreme Court Review, which is an overview of the previous Supreme Court term that comes out once a year. The article is entitled “The End of the Exclusionary Rule, Among Other Things: The Roberts Court Takes on the Fourth Amendment.” Mr. Moran was kind enough to send me a preliminary version of his article, and I highly recommend it. The 2006 Review can be purchased here.
October 27, 2006 in Law Student Blogs | Permalink | Comments (4) | TrackBack
Where is the Hudson v. Michigan Blog? - A Suggestion for Law Students
On June 15, 2006, the Supreme Court decided the case of Hudson v. Michigan. The Hudson Court held that a violation of the knock-and-announce rule by the police did not require excluding the evidence that they seized. This was a tremendously significant decision, and a quick Lexis search indicates that there have been 39 cases citing Hudson in state and federal courts. But three months later (on September 21st), not a single law review article about Hudson has been written and published. The reason is obvious: there has simply not been enough time.
No doubt at this very moment some lawyers and law professors are writing law review articles about Hudson and the knock-and-announce rule. All of these articles will be submitted to law reviews for publication. If they are approved, they will be edited and “acc-checked,” sent back to the author with corrections, resubmitted to the law review, edited and “acc-checked” a few more times, and finally published. How long after the actual case will they appear in print? At least a few months, and perhaps more than a year.
Meanwhile, there are prosecutors who are trying knock-and-announce cases, and there are defense attorneys who wonder how Hudson applies to their clients, and there are judges with their clerks who are wondering how Hudson is playing out in the various states and circuits. What questions are left unanswered by Hudson? What consequences should be expected? What progeny might be on the horizon? An attorney who relies on the traditional forms of legal publication will have to wait for a year to learn what the experts think. And when the law review articles finally begin to come out months from now, how many of them will have practical value? Some no doubt will be helpful to legal practitioners, but many of the articles will be esoteric and arcane, and some will already be outdated.
But suppose there were a blog devoted exclusively to the case of Hudson v. Michigan (the “HvM Blog”). This blog would become the online authority about the case and its ramifications. Every time a lower court relies on or distinguishes Hudson, the HvM Blog could name and analyze the new decision (and link to it if it’s online). Lawyers and law professors could analyze Hudson and its consequences, and submit their research to the blog. If some form of review were desired, submitted scholarship could potentially be approved, edited, and published within a week after being received. And as state legislatures pass statutes to clarify their laws in the wake of Hudson, the HvM Blog could follow the legislative developments. The blog could link to the online conversations already taking place about Hudson (for example, here and here). If done well, an HvM Blog would provide immediate benefits to the entire legal profession. Prosecutors and defense attorneys across the country would rely on it as a resource, and judges might even cite the blog in a court opinion.
Blogs are successfully challenging the monopoly that law reviews and law journals once held over the dissemination of legal scholarship. There are hundreds of law reviews and law journals, including the “main” and specialty ones. How many of the articles contained within are actually read? How many of them have an impact on the profession? How valuable are they to practitioners? How much time does a typical judge or lawyer take to read law review articles when they come out? And how many of these law reviews and law journals could be completely discontinued, with the negative consequences being minimal or non-existent? Every year, law students across the country endeavor to write-on to one of their school’s law journals. Those who are unsuccessful should consider creating a blog as an alternative. Those who do get on law journal should consider creating a blog on the side if time allows.
If (as this law professor complains) “the vast majority of law review articles are read by few people, and cited by even fewer,” and if (as this attorney says) “[b]logs are better for me than [law reviews] will ever be,” and if (as this judge predicts) “legal blogs will partially fill the ‘practicality’ gap between the legal academy and the rest of us,” then now is the time for law students to become pioneers in the legal blogosphere. Law students who create sophisticated and authoritative blogs will be laying the foundation for legal scholarship in the 21st century. Eventually future law students may consider starting a blog to be as valid as joining a law journal.
I used Hudson v. Michigan as an example, but any important case could merit a blog. The same holds for any significant statute or regulation, or for any major trial. Many legal specialties do not yet have a blog devoted to them (adoption law, for example). By creating a blog, a law student can take online ownership of whatever topic he chooses. He can turn his blog into a continuously updated resource that actual lawyers and judges pay attention to. He can invite lawyers and law professors to post their scholarship on his site, whether short-form or long-form, with a variety of styles ranging from the colloquial to the formal. He can also conduct his own research and publish his own work. Such a student may end up becoming a nationally-recognized authority on his chosen topic.
If law students are inspired by these ideas and create their own legal blogs, they should attempt to get Independent Study credit. This would require finding a faculty sponsor and getting approval from the administration. If it is too late for such a project to be approved this semester then it can be planned for next semester, by which time published articles on Hudson v. Michigan (for example) will still be lacking. Law students who want to make their blogs more official might join together and form a group blog. If any law students follow through with these ideas and start an HvM Blog or its equivalent, please let me know and I will try to send traffic your direction.
September 21, 2006 in Law Student Blogs | Permalink | Comments (8) | TrackBack