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NLJ: Pioneers in Law Blogging

This week’s National Law Journal profiles five Pioneers in Law Blogging:

Somewhere between fusty law treatises and Twitter lie law blogs, many of them written by the top legal scholars in the country. Just five years ago, the notion of law professors delivering quick and cogent commentary to the masses — with the opportunity for instant feedback, no less — was a novel concept. Today, it is rare for law schools not to have at least two or three professors on faculty who regularly tap away at their blogs, often with their morning cup of coffee or after they’ve put the kids to bed at night.


The National Law Journal has profiled some of the pioneers in law blogging. Their online endeavors keep readers current on topics ranging from Sixth Amendment rights to tax law, from faculty appointments to securities fraud. Their work has given legal scholars a greater voice in the public forum and brought recognition to the schools they represent.

I am delighted to be included along with Doug Berman (Ohio State; Sentencing Law & Policy), Christine Hurt (Illinois; The Conglomerate), Brian Leiter (Chicago; Leiter’s Law School Reports), and Eugene Volokh (UCLA; The Volokh Conspiracy).


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